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Re: Getting started
- To: Multiple recipients of list <pddmg@iucr.org>
- Subject: Re: Getting started
- From: vondreele@lanl.gov (Bob Von Dreele)
- Date: Tue, 23 Nov 1999 16:05:52 GMT
Dear Lachlan & others, GSAS will write cif files but can't read them. The routine GSAS2CIF has been worked over recently and does appear to successfully produce something that at least superficially looks like a cif file. I'd appreciate any comments one may have on the success or otherwise in using it and where it can be improved. Somewhere on my TBD list is a CIF2GSAS routine but finding time is the problem. One possible approach is to have facilities for extracting just part of the information from the cif file while building a GSAS exp file. I've already done this for PDB files, and there is a GSAS2PDB routine. The most useful data in a cif file are the atoms and the diffraction data. Hopefully, CIFtbx will be useful for this. Comments? Bob At 10:08 AM 11/23/99 +0000, you wrote: > >> Two comments. >> >> 1) There does exist a free FORTRAN subroutine library, CIFtbx >> (http://www.iucr.org/iucr-top/cif/software/ciftbx/README.html). I do not >> have much experience with it, but it looks pretty good to me. If CIFtbx >> is flawed or insufficient, this does need to be addressed. >> >> 2) I agree that a pdCIF file is not always that easy to read, since >> there are many ways to record data and software will need to be >> flexible. In the case of an indexing program, one will need to look for >> peak positions as _pd_peak_2theta_maximum or _pd_peak_2theta_centroid or >> _pd_peak_d_spacing. Of course it is OK to write a program that requires >> that peak positions be specified as d-spaces. Obviously an indexing >> program can't run if there is no peak table present. If one uses CIFtbx, >> I don't think it requires much more than a few dozen lines of code to >> pull in the peak positions and convert them, if needed. (BHT) > >One thing done by the World Wide Web consortium (http://www.w3.org/) >is to have a Web-browser they can hack at to show their latest >suggestions/standards in action in a real software program. > >Under the assumption that there is at present not one Rietveld >program that can both read/write good CIF for all occassions(?); >is there any chance that a collaboration could be fixed with a >Rietveld author who might be interested in this - and thus >find out what problems are encountered on the way to get a >full implementation? A rietveld with open source code would >be ideal but this may not be possible(?) > >Comments? > >Lachlan. > >-- >Lachlan M. D. Cranswick > >Collaborative Computational Project No 14 (CCP14) > for Single Crystal and Powder Diffraction >Daresbury Laboratory, Warrington, WA4 4AD U.K >Tel: +44-1925-603703 Fax: +44-1925-603124 >E-mail: l.cranswick@dl.ac.uk Ext: 3703 Room C14 > http://www.ccp14.ac.uk
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