Thank you very much for your comments which should facilitate finding Keywords 
(to complement use of Control-f).
I'll look into OPMRUN....
Regards,
Dave

-----Original Message-----
From: Opm <[email protected]> On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: 01 September 2020 13:00
To: [email protected]
Subject: Opm Digest, Vol 56, Issue 1

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Today's Topics:

   1. CPR and Find Facility (OPM User)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Tue, 1 Sep 2020 07:56:24 +0800
From: OPM User <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Opm] CPR and Find Facility
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed

David.

Just to add to Alf's comments on searching the manual.

On each keyword page, if you click a letter in the footer that will jump to a 
list of keywords for that letter, the list is color coded so you instantly know 
what keywords are implemented. If you then click on a keyword in that list it 
will jump to the keyword definition.

Also in in the footer there is a link to the Table of Contents and below each 
keyword definition, where the RUNSPEC , GRID table is, you can jump to the 
beginning of a section.

Finally, in the PDF if you display the "bookmarks" you can jump to a particular 
keyword without having to scroll up or down.

Regarding running OPM Flow, there is a Python script (OPMRUN), that allows you 
to select the cases to be run and to edit the parameter file, etc. similar to 
the commercial simulator's ECLRUN program, that one can call directly, or via 
Petrel. The other advantage of using OPMRUN is that there is a template editor 
for all the keywords that allows you to generate one or a series of keywords, 
which you can then paste into your editor. The documentation for OPMRUN is in 
the manual. Ideally this should be installed via pip, but I have been unable to 
manage this at the moment (I'm an reservoir engineer not a developer).

Note OPMRUN is meant to be used under Linux, so you have to run it under WSL (I 
have not tried that); however, it should not be too difficult to get it to run 
under Windows 10 and have the jobs submitted to WSL - just need to find some 
time.

OPM User
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