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Visualisation
- PISA supports two viewers:
- and
- /
.
Each page, which contains visualisation buttons, also contains
a drop-down switch between Jmol and Rasmol/Rastop.
- Jmol
Jmol is a platform-independent server-side java viewer, which is the
default in PISA. It should work on any browser which has java plug-ins enabled.
Starting Jmol for the first
time will take some additional "dead" time for the Jmol applet
to download from our server. Repeated use of Jmol will be normally
much quicker, even quicker than using Rasmol/Rastop because
PISA compresses the structural data before sending it to Jmol. There
will always be a natural delay after starting the applet and
displaying the structure, which depends on the structure size
and your internet connection speed. If Jmol does not work,
please consult Jmol
.
Jmol has a limitation on the number of atoms it can display in
the screen. Large protein assemblies may go over this limit, in
which case only backbone atoms will be sent for visualisation and
a warning will be displayed in Jmol window. In order to see
all atoms, use Rasmol/Rastop for visualisation.
- Rasmol/Rastop
PISA sends an ordinary PDB file, preceeded by Rasmol script,
when you click view a button or link
in a PISA page. If your browser was not previously configured
for working with such data, you will be asked if you want to
open the data with an application or to download them into
a file. Choose "Open with application" and then specify the
application details. Those are platform-dependent; we describe
the options below. All visualisation tools recommended here
are freely available and may be redaily found internet search. Having
properly configured your browser once, you should be able to
view structures from PISA as smoothly as you would do that from
a standalone application, without any intervention from the browser.
- APPLICATION (Unix/Linux)
The server assumes using the
as the visualisation tool. Netscape users should include it into
the browser's helper application list.
- APPLICATION (Windows)
For MS Windows machines, we normally recommend using
as a more functional tool. However, there are reports on problems with launching Rastop from browsers in MS Windows
2000 and may be in other MS Windows platforms; should you encounter any of those, consider using Raswin instead.
Raswin may be found in distributions. In our
experience, Raswin 2.6 beta-2a, available from the following ,
works just as well as a UNIX-based Rasmol.
- VISUALISATION DATA
The server sends the visualisation data as a file named send.rasmol, mime type
application/x-rasmol. The data is suitable for both Rasmol/Raswin and Rastop.
- USING Rasmol
The server's data should be passed to Rasmol as second parameter,
the first one being -script
(older versions) or -s
(newer versions of Rasmol).
- Rasmol in Netscape 6
Netscape 6+ has an apparent bug that does not allow the specification of
-script or
-s as a first parameter
when Rasmol is included into the browser's helper application
list. The following C program allows the option to be hidden (use
it as you would use Rasmol but without
-script or
-s parameter; Rasmol
should be installed and accessible to the program):
#include <string.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int main ( int argc, char ** argv, char ** env ) {
char S[1000];
strcpy ( S,"rasmol -script" );
for (int i=1;i<argc;i++) {
strcat ( S," " );
strcat ( S,argv[i] );
}
system ( S );
return 0;
}
- USING Rastop
The server's data should be passed to Rastop as the only parameter.
- USING Raswin
The server's data should be passed to Raswin as second parameter, the first one being -script.
Raswin in Internet Explorer
Internet Explorer picks the application according to the file type (file extension) of the document to be opened. There are
difficulties in specifying -script as a first parameter and, sometimes,
in getting a data stream from the browser. The following script
copy %1 c:\temp.pdb
start drive:\path\rw32b2a.exe -script c:\temp.pdb
buffers the browser's output stream and then calls Raswin.
Sometimes the following:
start drive:\path\rw32b2a.exe -script %1
works just fine. Locate the script when IE asks you to specify an application for displaying (opening) rasmol data, and check
"Always open with this application" if you are happy with the results. To remove the script from the list of associated
applications, open any folder in Windows Explorer and then go to View/Options/File Types.
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