Jon Cooper
> Sent: Sunday, February 18, 2024 09:39
> To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
> Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] Interface Configuration and Mapslicer Question
>
> You could search for peaks of decreasing height by stepping back through
> through alphabet with your text searches. Of course
installations on different Windows
10/11 computers
Thx, BR
From: CCP4 bulletin board On Behalf Of Jon Cooper
Sent: Sunday, February 18, 2024 09:39
To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] Interface Configuration and Mapslicer Question
You could search for peaks of decreasing
You could search for peaks of decreasing height by stepping back through
through alphabet with your text searches. Of course, peakmax will do a good job
of finding them anyway.
Best wishes, Jon Cooper. jon.b.coo...@protonmail.com
Sent from Proton Mail mobile
Original Message
I think we used to use mapsig for printing map sections with single characters
to show peak height. You could set it so that low or no density was just a dot
and higher values were 0...9 ... A... Z ... * #, etc. up to the maximum or
maybe it was another one of Ian's programs. It made peak
Der CCP4 Experts & Developers,
I am exercising in CCP4i (Windows, 8.0.017) some old-fashioned native
Patterson maps for NCS analysis, using 'patterson' of FFT which produces the
*.map (dump) file and 3 Harker *.plt files.
Unfortunately, epic fail on the display of the results.
The