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(redundant script, functionality already in PyMOL)
 
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===DESCRIPTION===
PyMOL allows the execution of python commands from the PyMOL command line.  It is very useful for both debugging, and for discovering new functions.
This is a small script to allow the execution of python commands from the PyMOL command line.  It is very useful for both debugging, and for discovering new functions.
 
* Any expression that is not recognized as a PyMOL command is passed to the underlying python interpreter
* To force a one-line expression to be executed as python, begin the line with a slash (/)
* Use the [[python]] command to input multi-line python code
 
== Examples ==


===USAGE===
<source lang="python">
<source lang="python">
py (python commands)
# there is no "print" command in PyMOL, so this will go to the python interpreter
</source>
print "Hello World (1)"


# same, but force it to be python
/print "Hello World (2)"


<source lang="python">
# no lets trick this system by introducing a PyMOL command named "print"
from pymol import cmd
cmd.extend('print', lambda msg: sys.stdout.write("You gave me `%s`\n" % (msg)))


def parse(command):
# see what happens
exec command
print "Hello World (3)"


cmd.extend('py', parse)
# this will still go to the python interpreter
/print "Hello World (4)"
</source>
</source>
[[Category:Script_Library]]
 
[[Category:System_Scripts]]
[[Category:System_Scripts]]

Latest revision as of 10:52, 18 August 2011

PyMOL allows the execution of python commands from the PyMOL command line. It is very useful for both debugging, and for discovering new functions.

  • Any expression that is not recognized as a PyMOL command is passed to the underlying python interpreter
  • To force a one-line expression to be executed as python, begin the line with a slash (/)
  • Use the python command to input multi-line python code

Examples

# there is no "print" command in PyMOL, so this will go to the python interpreter
print "Hello World (1)"

# same, but force it to be python
/print "Hello World (2)"

# no lets trick this system by introducing a PyMOL command named "print"
cmd.extend('print', lambda msg: sys.stdout.write("You gave me `%s`\n" % (msg)))

# see what happens
print "Hello World (3)"

# this will still go to the python interpreter
/print "Hello World (4)"