Jared, my haptic device is SensAble Phantom Omni and now it is called
Geomagic Touch. I work on integration it with PyMOL and VRPN.
So far so good, but now I have a little more complicated problem with
rotate and translate functions.
When I set camera=0 in both of them, it doesn't matter if I mov
I downloaded it from the link here
http://www.pymolwiki.org/index.php/Windows_Install
-- Camilo Jiménez
On Tue, Feb 18, 2014 at 2:17 PM, Paweł Tomaszewski wrote:
> Hi Camilo.
>
> I've got the same error! But it seems, there's no simple solution for
> this. Where do you have your PyMOL from?
>
Hi Sampsa -
The long list of ids crashes for me as well. Instead of listing each id
separately, you can use ranges to define your selections.
select paska, id 36-58
select isopaska, id 36-350
If you need to use non-continuous ids, you can use Boolean logic to join the
ranges:
select isopaska
Hi Pawel -
Glad you were able to make it work. Also, that haptic device (I guess the new
version is the Geomagic Touch?) looks pretty neat.
I'm now realizing that when you asked "how to make a rotation of the CGO about
axis that is NOT of the global pymol coordinate system but goes through the
Hi Camilo.
I've got the same error! But it seems, there's no simple solution for this.
Where do you have your PyMOL from?
Cheers
Pawel
2014-02-18 2:08 GMT+01:00 Camilo Andrés Jimenez Cruz <
camilo.jimen...@gmail.com>:
> Hi everybody
>
> I installed pymol 1.6.x unofficial in windows 7 home. As
Jared, Thomas thank you guys!
Now everything works great :)
The solution was pretty simple and I don't know why it took me so long...
I have a X,Y and Z coordinates from my SensAble Pantom haptic device and
quaternions to do rotations of cone.
The problem was, that in 'translate' function I didn'
Hi,
I am trying to select a large number of atoms, using a pymol script.
The first script file looks like this:
---
select paska, id
36+37+38+39+40+41+42+43+44+45+46+47+48+49+50+51+52+53+54+55+56+57+58
The second one like this:
select isopaska, id
36+37+38+39+
Hi Pawel -
If you can determine the primary axis of the cone from the tip and the center
of the circle at the base, you can give `rotate` an arbitrary [x,y,z] float
vector as its first argument instead of x, y or z. For example, if you
generate your cone using something like the following Pyth
Hi Pawel,
you should read
PyMOL> help(cmd.rotate)
This would tell you that the rotate function has a "origin" argument.
Hope that helps.
Cheers,
Thomas
On 17 Feb 2014, at 14:40, Paweł Tomaszewski wrote:
> Thank you Thomas
> Using camera=0 caused my cone not to do rotations related to the