Difference between revisions of "3d pdf"

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Line 36: Line 36:
 
\author{Jason Vertrees}
 
\author{Jason Vertrees}
 
\maketitle
 
\maketitle
\begin{center}
+
\begin{figure}[!htb]
 +
\centering
 
\includemovie[
 
\includemovie[
        poster,
+
poster,
        toolbar, %same as `controls'
+
toolbar, %same as `controls'
        label=pymol.ud3
+
label=pymol.ud3
        text=(pymol.u3d),
+
text=(pymol.u3d),
        3Dlights=CAD,
+
3Dlights=CAD,
        % replace the next line with what PyMOL output
+
% replace the next line with what PyMOL output
        3Daac=20.0, 3Droll=0, 3Dc2c=0 0 1, 3Droo=62.45, 3Dcoo=0 0 -62.45
+
3Daac=20.0, 3Droll=0, 3Dc2c=0 0 1, 3Droo=243.39, 3Dcoo=0 0 -243.39
 
]{\linewidth}{\linewidth}{pymol.u3d}
 
]{\linewidth}{\linewidth}{pymol.u3d}
\label{ex3d} A PyMOL object embedded in PDF, using U3D data format.
+
\caption{A PyMOL object embedded in PDF, using U3D data format.}
\end{center}
+
\label{mov:ex3d}
 +
\end{figure}
 
\end{document}
 
\end{document}
 
</source>
 
</source>

Revision as of 07:43, 3 March 2013

Overview

PyMOL can convert to formats (vrml2 and idtf) that can be converted to a 3D PDF (will not work with most PDF browser plugins; must be downloaded and viewed with certain viewers liked Adobe Acrobat 9.2+).

Requirements

Get IDFT file from PyMOL

  • Save your molecule to an IDTF file in PyMOL:
save pymol.idtf, *

PyMOL will print a line that looks like:

 3Daac=20.0, 3Droll=0, 3Dc2c=0 0 1, 3Droo=62.45, 3Dcoo=0 0 -62.45

copy this line into the pymol.tex file overwriting the same line in the file.

Convert the IDTF to U3D

  1. Download Universal 3D Sample Software - u3d converter - IDTF to U3D, and extract to Desktop or C:\Program Files.
  2. Navigate to the bin folder: \Desktop\U3D_A_061228_5\Bin\Win32\Release
  3. Copy pymol.idtf in here.
  4. Hold shift key, right click in folder, click Open command window here.

Then copy this inot command window:

IDTFConverter -input pymol.idtf -output pymol.u3d

Copy the pymol.u3d into your LaTeX folder

LaTeX code

  • The following LaTeX code saved as "pymol.tex":
\documentclass[a4paper]{article}
\usepackage[3D]{movie15}
\usepackage[UKenglish]{babel}
\usepackage[colorlinks=true]{hyperref} 
\begin{document}
\title{PyMOL 3D Objects in PDF}
\author{Jason Vertrees}
\maketitle
\begin{figure}[!htb]
\centering
\includemovie[
poster,
toolbar, %same as `controls'
label=pymol.ud3
text=(pymol.u3d),
3Dlights=CAD,
% replace the next line with what PyMOL output
3Daac=20.0, 3Droll=0, 3Dc2c=0 0 1, 3Droo=243.39, 3Dcoo=0 0 -243.39
]{\linewidth}{\linewidth}{pymol.u3d}
\caption{A PyMOL object embedded in PDF, using U3D data format.}
\label{mov:ex3d}
\end{figure}
\end{document}
  • Create the PDF using LaTeX:
 pdflatex pymol.tex

Caveats

  • Currently you have to compile the u3d converter on Linux. I did that with:
cmake .
make

which created "IDTFConverter" that I used above.

  • Some versions of Acrobat on Linux incorrectly parse the 3D data. Adobe knows about this and plans to fix it. Ironically, I created a 3D PDF on Linux but could only view it on Mac OS X.

More on 3D PDFs