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Difference between revisions of "Movie pdf"
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== See Also == | == See Also == | ||
− | * [[3d_pdf]] | + | * [[3d_pdf 3d protein image in pdf]] |
− | * [[Biochemistry_student_intro#GUI_- | + | * [[Biochemistry_student_intro#GUI_-_Scene_loop Example Scene_loop]] |
[[Category:PyMOL_in_pdf]] | [[Category:PyMOL_in_pdf]] |
Revision as of 12:13, 3 March 2013
Overview
PyMOL can save videos to formats (.mpg) that can be converted to a movie PDF (will not work with most PDF browser plugins; must be downloaded and viewed with certain viewers liked Adobe Acrobat 9.2+).
Requirements
- PyMOL
- LaTeX (pdflatex)
Get .mpg file from PyMOL
- Save a .mpg file from your video.
You can try this tutorial:
Biochemistry_student_intro#GUI_-_Scene_loop Scene_loop
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{Troels Linnet}
\maketitle
\begin{figure}[!htb]
\centering
\includemovie[
poster,
toolbar, %same as `controls'
text={\small(Click to play movie)}
]{320px}{216px}{movie.mpg}
\caption{A PyMOL movie object embedded in PDF, using mpg format.}
\label{mov:ex3d}
\end{figure}
See movie \ref{mov:ex3d}
\end{document}
- Create the PDF using LaTeX:
pdflatex pymol.tex