Thomas, A multi-state CGO object is definitely the way to do with this. Check out the pymol/examples/devel/cgo03.py script for an example of creating just such an object.
Cheers, Warren. -- Warren L. DeLano, Ph.D. Principal Scientist . DeLano Scientific LLC . 400 Oyster Point Blvd., Suite 213 . South San Francisco, CA 94080 USA . Biz:(650)-872-0942 Tech:(650)-872-0834 . Fax:(650)-872-0273 Cell:(650)-346-1154 . mailto:war...@delsci.com > -----Original Message----- > From: pymol-users-ad...@lists.sourceforge.net > [mailto:pymol-users-ad...@lists.sourceforge.net] On Behalf Of > Thomas Asbury > Sent: Wednesday, May 11, 2005 3:27 PM > To: pymol-users@lists.sourceforge.net > Subject: [PyMOL] Displaying vectors each frame > > > Hi - > > I would like to display some force vectors operating on > atoms. These vectors do have a time dependence. > > I know the general mechanism - create a script which reads > the vectors coordinates in and then draws different 3d vector > CGOs each frame. > > Has anyone done this before? any code? > Or any pointers on how to load data per frame? > Can it be cached or do I have to load on-the-fly? > > Thanks - > Tom > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.Net email is sponsored by Oracle Space Sweepstakes > Want to be the first software developer in space? > Enter now for the Oracle Space Sweepstakes! > http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=7393&alloc_id=16281&op=click > _______________________________________________ > PyMOL-users mailing list > PyMOL-users@lists.sourceforge.net > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/pymol-users >