[PyMOL] Announcement: CCP4 crystallographic summer school in USA, at APS, June 16-23

2015-01-07 Thread Sanishvili, Ruslan
Dear Colleagues,

We are pleased to announce the eighth annual CCP4 crystallographic summer 
school at Advanced Photon Source (APS), Argonne National Laboratory (ANL). All 
details can be found at
http://www.ccp4.ac.uk/schools/APS-2015/index.phphttp://www.ccp4.ac.uk/schools/APS-2014/index.php

Title: CCP4 crystallographic school: From data collection to structure 
refinement and beyond

Dates: June 16 through 23

Site: Advanced Photon Source, Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, Illinois 
(Near Chicago), USA

The school content:
Data collection workshop the first three days: beamline training and data 
collection on GM/CA@APS beamlines 23ID-B and 23ID-D. For data collection, only 
the participants' crystals will be used.
Software workshop: The rest of the time after data collection will feature many 
modern crystallographic software packages taught by authors and other experts. 
The daily schedule will be organized in three sections – lectures, tutorials 
and hands-on trouble-shooting.
There will be model data sets available for tutorials but data, provided by 
participants, will have higher priority for the hands-on sessions.

Applicants: Graduate students, postdoctoral researchers and young scientists at 
the assistant professor level are encouraged to apply. Only 20 applicants will 
be selected for participation. Participants of the workshop are strongly 
encouraged to bring their own problem data sets or crystals so the problems can 
be addressed during data collection and/or computation workshops.

Application: Application deadline is April 16. The application form, the 
program, contact info and other details can be found at 
http://www.ccp4.ac.uk/schools/APS-2015/index.php

Fees: There is no fee for the workshop. The students will be responsible for 
their transportation and lodging. The workshop organizers can assist in making 
the reservations at economical lodging at the Argonne Guest House. The workshop 
will cover the expenses for all meals and refreshments.

We hope to see you at the school,
Garib, Ronan and Nukri

Ruslan Sanishvili (Nukri)
Macromolecular Crystallographer
GM/CA@APS
X-ray Science Division, ANL
9700 S. Cass Ave.
Lemont, IL 60439

Tel: (630)252-0665
Fax: (630)252-0667
rsanishv...@anl.gov

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Re: [PyMOL] How do I undo my last command I executed in the PyMOL command line and viewer?

2015-01-07 Thread Schubert, Carsten [JRDUS]
As far as I you cannot undo commands issued on the command line. This feature 
seems to be mostly targeted towards the builder interface or some other 
interactive features. For 'newbies' I would recommend opening up a session, 
starting to work on your presentation and saving frequently. That way you have 
a fallback. However it is much easier in the long run to invest some time and 
building the presentation with a script. A good way to do that would be to have 
a clear picture in mind what kind of presentation to make, then enable logging 
and work your way through your presentation, can be combined with sessions as 
well. You can use the log file as a starting point for a pml (not python based) 
script. 

-Original Message-
From: Brenton Horne [mailto:brentonho...@ymail.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2015 10:44 PM
To: pymol-users@lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: [PyMOL] How do I undo my last command I executed in the PyMOL command 
line and viewer?

Hi,

I thought that running undo from the PyMOL command line would do this but it 
didn't do anything that I could see visually in the viewer. I've also tried 
going to Edit-Undo and it didn't do anything visually apparent in the viewer.

Thanks for your time,
Brenton

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things parallel software development, from weekly thought leadership blogs to 
news, videos, case studies, tutorials and more. Take a look and join the 
conversation now. http://goparallel.sourceforge.net 
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hub for all things parallel software development, from weekly thought
leadership blogs to news, videos, case studies, tutorials and more. Take a
look and join the conversation now. http://goparallel.sourceforge.net
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