On Tue, 2004-12-07 at 08:53 -0500, Miguel wrote: > The only thing that occurs to me is to make it out of atoms. Add > additional atoms to your file. Realistically, in order to do this you > would need to write a program to generate them. Choose atoms with high > element numbers. Place them far enough apart that they do not bond. Make > each element number a different color. > > Maybe someone else will have another idea.
One other way would be to convert the file to PDB format and place the atom properties in the B factor column. Then the surface plot could use the values from the B factor column to color the region corresponding to the atom - though I don't know how feasible this would in terms of code (This is the way I color surfaces by hydrophobicity in Pymol.) ------------------------------------------------------------------- Rajarshi Guha <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <http://jijo.cjb.net> GPG Fingerprint: 0CCA 8EE2 2EEB 25E2 AB04 06F7 1BB9 E634 9B87 56EE ------------------------------------------------------------------- How I wish I were what I was when I wished I were what I am. ------------------------------------------------------- SF email is sponsored by - The IT Product Guide Read honest & candid reviews on hundreds of IT Products from real users. Discover which products truly live up to the hype. Start reading now. http://productguide.itmanagersjournal.com/ _______________________________________________ Jmol-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/jmol-users

