PyMOL: Difference between revisions

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[http://pymol.org PyMOL] is a  stand-alone [[Molecular modeling and visualization software|molecular visualization]] program that is very popular with protein crystallographers because of the high quality of its rendering, its speed and versatility. A large percentage of the figures in journal publications reporting new macromolecular structures are created using PyMOL. PyMOL is the creation of [http://www.delanoscientific.com/ Warren Delano]. It has an innovative license: it is open source, but not free in all forms: the author's current ready-to-run downloads (binaries) and up-to-date documentation require payment of modest annual subscription fees. However, a [http://pymol.org/educational free version] is available to students and educators for classroom use, out-of-date binary builds can be freely downloaded, and some Linux distributions provide PyMOL packages compiled from the open-source code.
[http://pymol.org PyMOL] is a  stand-alone [[Molecular modeling and visualization software|molecular visualization]] program that is very popular with protein crystallographers because of the high quality of its rendering, its speed and versatility. A large percentage of the figures in journal publications reporting new macromolecular structures are created using PyMOL. PyMOL is the creation of [http://www.delanoscientific.com/ Warren Delano]. It has an innovative license: it is open source, but not free in all forms: the author's current ready-to-run downloads (binaries) and up-to-date documentation require payment of modest annual subscription fees. However, a current [http://pymol.org/educational.html free version] is available to students and educators for classroom use, old out-of-date binary builds can be [http://delsci.com/rel/099 freely downloaded] by anyone, and some Linux distributions provide [http://packages.debian.org/stable/pymol PyMOL packages] compiled from the open-source code.


PyMOL has a strong user community which interacts via the [http://sourceforge.net/mail/?group_id=4546 PyMOL-Users] mailing list and operates the [http://pymolwiki.org PyMOL Wiki] documentation site.  The "Py" in PyMOL refers to the [http://python.org Python language], an integral part of the package.  Python enables users to automate PyMOL with simple command scripts and to develop their own custom user interfaces.  
PyMOL has a strong user community which interacts via the [http://sourceforge.net/mail/?group_id=4546 PyMOL-Users] mailing list and operates the [http://pymolwiki.org PyMOL Wiki] documentation site.  The "Py" in PyMOL refers to the [http://python.org Python language], an integral part of the package.  Python enables users to automate PyMOL with simple command scripts and to develop plugins with their own custom user interfaces.  


==See Also==
==See Also==

Revision as of 19:31, 8 November 2008

PyMOL is a stand-alone molecular visualization program that is very popular with protein crystallographers because of the high quality of its rendering, its speed and versatility. A large percentage of the figures in journal publications reporting new macromolecular structures are created using PyMOL. PyMOL is the creation of Warren Delano. It has an innovative license: it is open source, but not free in all forms: the author's current ready-to-run downloads (binaries) and up-to-date documentation require payment of modest annual subscription fees. However, a current free version is available to students and educators for classroom use, old out-of-date binary builds can be freely downloaded by anyone, and some Linux distributions provide PyMOL packages compiled from the open-source code.

PyMOL has a strong user community which interacts via the PyMOL-Users mailing list and operates the PyMOL Wiki documentation site. The "Py" in PyMOL refers to the Python language, an integral part of the package. Python enables users to automate PyMOL with simple command scripts and to develop plugins with their own custom user interfaces.

See AlsoSee Also

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Eric Martz, Warren DeLano, Eran Hodis, Wayne Decatur, Jaime Prilusky