Difference between revisions of "Copying and pasting scripts"

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(Applet)
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==Applet==
 
==Applet==
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We'll assume you have obtained a molecular scene in a web page, in the Jmol applet, and that you wish to regenerate this scene in a Jmol applet elsewhere. The goal is to display the state script for the desired molecular scene, copy and paste the state script into the Jmol console, and run the state script. The details depend on the computer being used.
 
===Apple Mac OS X===
 
===Apple Mac OS X===
 
===MS Windows===
 
===MS Windows===

Revision as of 16:15, 29 September 2011

Jmol scripts are groups of Jmol commands that, when executed in Jmol, produce a desired molecular scene. Sometimes it is useful to obtain a script from one place, and run it in Jmol somewhere else. For example, certain molecular scenes are generated much more easily in FirstGlance in Jmol than elsewhere (e.g. showing contacts to a ligand). Such a scene can be reproduced in Proteopedia.Org by generating the state script in FirstGlance, and executing it in Proteopedia's molecular Scene Authoring Tools (see instructions).

Java presents some technical obstacles to copying and pasting scripts. Below are described known workarounds.

Applet

We'll assume you have obtained a molecular scene in a web page, in the Jmol applet, and that you wish to regenerate this scene in a Jmol applet elsewhere. The goal is to display the state script for the desired molecular scene, copy and paste the state script into the Jmol console, and run the state script. The details depend on the computer being used.

Apple Mac OS X

MS Windows

Application

(please provide details here)

Contributors

EricMartz, AngelHerraez