That's great, thanks for letting me know Warren! I'll work on creating motion paths for the camera to move along and get back to this list about it.
:) JP Date: Wed, 4 Jun 2003 13:26:52 -0700 From: Warren L. DeLano <war...@delanoscientific.com> To: 'JP Cartailler' <j...@bragg.bio.uci.edu>, pymol-users@lists.sourceforge.net Subject: RE: [PyMOL] RE: [ccp4bb]: Pymol stereo question (fwd) You do, at least in a way. It's called... view=cmd.get_view() and cmd.set_view(view) ... Adapted from kristian's wonderful tips page: http://www.rubor.de/bioinf/pymol_tips.html Meaning of the get_view output Of the 18 numbers in the output array, 0-8 is the 3x3 rotation matrix, 9-11 is the camera offset, (RELATIVE TO ORIGIN, in WORLD FRAME OF REF.) 12-14 is the origin of rotation, 15-16 are the clipping distances, and 17 is the orthoscopic flag. For example, view=cmd.get_view() view=view[0:12] + (1,3,4) + view[15:] cmd.set_view(view) would set the origin to (1,3,4) Cheers, Warren -- mailto:war...@delanoscientific.com Warren L. DeLano, Ph.D. Principal Scientist DeLano Scientific LLC Voice (650)-346-1154 Fax (650)-593-4020 -----Original Message----- From: pymol-users-ad...@lists.sourceforge.net [mailto:pymol-users-ad...@lists.sourceforge.net] On Behalf Of JP Cartailler Sent: Wednesday, June 04, 2003 11:14 AM To: pymol-users@lists.sourceforge.net Subject: [PyMOL] RE: [ccp4bb]: Pymol stereo question (fwd) Very true. It would be great to have a feature where we have access to a camera object, with control of the: 1. camera root (where the camera) 2. camera target (where it's looking) 3. focal length control 4. and all associated 6D transforms. :) JP ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Wed, 4 Jun 2003 13:51:16 -0400 (EDT) From: Tim F <f...@brandeis.edu> To: Warren L. DeLano <war...@delanoscientific.com> Cc: 'Flip Hoedemaeker' <f...@keydp.com>, 'Claudine Mayer' <claudine.ma...@lmcp.jussieu.fr>, 'CCP4' <ccp...@dl.ac.uk>, pymol-users@lists.sourceforge.net Subject: RE: [ccp4bb]: Pymol stereo question *** For details on how to be removed from this list visit the *** *** CCP4 home page http://www.ccp4.ac.uk *** On Wed, 4 Jun 2003, Warren L. DeLano wrote: > > ray angle=-3 > png image1.png > ray angle=3 > png image2.png > This method of generating stereo images is correct, but also leads to quite a bit of vertical parallax (the so-called "toe-in" projection) - this is why many stereoscopic images are hard to view properly (usually, edges of the image are out of focus). What you really want is a non-symmetric camera frustrum (dunno how hard this is to do in pymol....) where the two images should look along parallel vectors separated by some distance (something like 1/20 the focal length). Check out Paul Bourke's page for all the details: http://astronomy.swin.edu.au/~pbourke/stereographics/ Hope this helps. Regards, Tim F -- --------------------------------------------------------- Tim Fenn f...@brandeis.edu Rosenstiel Basic Medical Sciences Research Center Brandeis University, Mail Stop 029 415 South Street Waltham, MA 02454 Phone: (781) 736-4942 FAX: (781) 736-2405 --------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by: Etnus, makers of TotalView, The best thread debugger on the planet. Designed with thread debugging features you've never dreamed of, try TotalView 6 free at www.etnus.com. _______________________________________________ PyMOL-users mailing list PyMOL-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/pymol-users