ccp4 v7.1.015 – Macromolecular X-Ray Crystallography

ccp4 v7.1.015

:: DESCRIPTION

ccp4 (Collaborative Computational Project No. 4) exists to produce and support a world-leading, integrated suite of programs that allows researchers to determine macromolecular structures by X-ray crystallography, and other biophysical techniques. CCP4 aims to develop and support the development of cutting edge approaches to experimental determination and analysis of protein structure, and integrate these approaches into the suite. CCP4 is a community based resource that supports the widest possible researcher community, embracing academic, not for profit, and for profit research. CCP4 aims to play a key role in the education and training of scientists in experimental structural biology. It encourages the wide dissemination of new ideas, techniques and practice.

:: DEVELOPER

ccp4 Team

:: SCREENSHOTS

N/A

:: REQUIREMENTS

:: DOWNLOAD

 ccp4

:: MORE INFORMATION

Citation:

M. D. Winn et al. Acta. Cryst. D67 , 235-242 (2011)
Overview of the CCP4 suite and current developments
Acta Crystallographica Section D, Biological Crystallography,Volume 67, Part 4

Elves 1.3.6.1.2 – Conversational User Interface to the most common X-ray Crystallography programs

Elves 1.3.6.1.2

:: DESCRIPTION

Elves are a compact, portable, and intelligent “conversational user interface” to the most common X-ray crystallography programs like CCP4, mosflm, denzo, solve, and shelx. Elves exist as a single text file (shell script) which will run on any unix platform using nothing more than basic unix utilities like csh, awk and grep (plus the executables of the public-domain X-ray programs). Users communicate with the Elves in plain english, and the Elves will then locate, set up and run the appropriate x-ray programs.

::DEVELOPER

James Holton

:: SCREENSHOTS

N/A

:: REQUIREMENTS

  • Linux

:: DOWNLOAD

 Elves

:: MORE INFORMATION

Citation

Holton, J. M. & Alber, T. (2004)
Automated protein crystal structure determination using ELVES
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 101, 1537–1542.