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For advanced users, Open-Source PyMOL (as well as the Schrödinger-provided "[http://pymol.org/download Mac alternative X11-only build]") also allows to run PyMOL from an existing Python process. After importing the '''pymol''' module, PyMOL's event loop has to be started with a call to '''pymol.finish_launching()'''.
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For advanced users, the following PyMOL versions also allow to run PyMOL from an existing Python process:
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* [https://pymol.org/2/#download PyMOL 2.0] based on Anaconda (using Anaconda's python, which is included in bundles provided by Schrödinger)
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* Open-Source PyMOL
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* Schrödinger-provided "[http://pymol.org/download Mac alternative X11-only build]" of the 1.8.x series
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After importing the '''pymol''' module, PyMOL's event loop has to be started with a call to '''pymol.finish_launching()'''.
  
 
== Usage ==
 
== Usage ==

Revision as of 16:11, 28 September 2017

The recommended way to run PyMOL-Python scripts is by using PyMOL as the interpreter. This is supported by all versions of PyMOL, including the pre-compiled bundles provided by Schrödinger.

Example from a shell:

shell> pymol -cq script.py

With arguments (sys.argv becomes ["script.py", "foo", "bar"]):

shell> pymol -cq script.py -- foo bar

Example from a running PyMOL instance:

PyMOL> run script.py

For advanced users, the following PyMOL versions also allow to run PyMOL from an existing Python process:

  • PyMOL 2.0 based on Anaconda (using Anaconda's python, which is included in bundles provided by Schrödinger)
  • Open-Source PyMOL
  • Schrödinger-provided "Mac alternative X11-only build" of the 1.8.x series

After importing the pymol module, PyMOL's event loop has to be started with a call to pymol.finish_launching().

Usage

Since PyMOL 1.7.4, the following form is sufficient:

import pymol
pymol.finish_launching(['pymol', '-q'])

Before 1.7.4, either "-K" was needed as an additional argument, or arguments had to be assigned to __main__.pymol_argv or pymol.pymol_argv.

Example 1

Here is an example script that launches PyMol for stereo viewing on a VisBox. It runs PyMol fullscreen stereo, and disables the internal gui. The environment (PYTHON_PATH and PYMOL_PATH) must already be set up for this example to work (see Example 2 below for how to setup within the script).

#!/usr/bin/env python
 
# Tell PyMOL to launch quiet (-q), fullscreen (-e) and without internal GUI (-i)
import __main__
__main__.pymol_argv = [ 'pymol', '-qei' ]
 
import pymol
 
# Call the function below before using any PyMOL modules.
pymol.finish_launching()
 
from pymol import cmd
cmd.stereo('walleye')
cmd.set('stereo_shift', 0.23)
cmd.set('stereo_angle', 1.0)

Example 2

This script launches PyMOL without any GUI for scripting only. It enables tab-completion on the python command line and does the PyMOL environment setup (you need to adjust the moddir variable!). Hint: You may save this as "pymol-cli" executable.

#!/usr/bin/python2.6 -i

import sys, os

# autocompletion
import readline
import rlcompleter
readline.parse_and_bind('tab: complete')

# pymol environment
moddir='/opt/pymol-svn/modules'
sys.path.insert(0, moddir)
os.environ['PYMOL_PATH'] = os.path.join(moddir, 'pymol/pymol_path')

# pymol launching: quiet (-q), without GUI (-c) and with arguments from command line
import pymol
pymol.pymol_argv = ['pymol','-qc'] + sys.argv[1:]
pymol.finish_launching()
cmd = pymol.cmd

STDOUT

PyMOL captures sys.stdout and sys.stderr, to control it with it's own feedback mechanism. To prevent that, save and restore both streams, e.g.:

import sys
stdout = sys.stdout
stderr = sys.stderr
pymol.finish_launching(['pymol', '-xiq'])
sys.stdout = stdout
sys.stderr = stderr

See Also