Difference between revisions of "Workshop exercises"
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=== Importing annotations for a single tomogram=== | === Importing annotations for a single tomogram=== | ||
+ | You have a tomogram and a text file with 3D coordinates. It's a simple situation, so you don't want to use the ''Catalogue'' to crop particles from the tomogram in the positions indicated by the file. | ||
+ | |||
+ | * How can you create a data folder and a table? | ||
+ | * What if the coordinates in your file correspond to a binned tomogram? | ||
+ | * What if you have a second file indicating an euler triplet of orientations for each particle? | ||
=== Importing annotations for several catalogued tomograms=== | === Importing annotations for several catalogued tomograms=== |
Revision as of 15:28, 16 August 2016
Contents
General tools
Average
Create an average given a table and a data folder, programmatically.
Particle extraction
Fast annotations on a tomogram
Sometimes, for small tasks, accessing the tomograms through the Catalogue can be tedious. It is thus convenient to become familiar with alternatives.
Inspect a tomogram, mark several 3D positions and get them as a text file with three columns (x,y,z).
Cropping a data folder with a different particle size
You have a data folder containing particles and a crop.tbl (and the usual auxiliary files produced when extracting particles through the catalogue). The table indicates that several tomograms where used during the extraction. You want to reproduce the data folder with bigger particles, but don't remember how you used the Catalogue to generate the data folder (maybe some weeks ago).
Task: Recrop the particles with a different particle sidelength using dtcrop and without using the catalogue.
Importing annotations for a single tomogram
You have a tomogram and a text file with 3D coordinates. It's a simple situation, so you don't want to use the Catalogue to crop particles from the tomogram in the positions indicated by the file.
- How can you create a data folder and a table?
- What if the coordinates in your file correspond to a binned tomogram?
- What if you have a second file indicating an euler triplet of orientations for each particle?
Importing annotations for several catalogued tomograms
Imagine the same situation as in the previous exercise, but for multiple tomograms: You have several tomograms and for each one you have a text file with particle coordinates. This time you want to keep a clean track of everything you do, so you plan to use the Catalogue. To this end, you have already put your volumes inside a catalogue.
Task: How do you convert a text file into a Dynamo model? How do you assign programmatically to each volume in a catalogue a different model?
Subboxing from tomograms
Subboxing tools are used to crop subtomograms from subtomograms. We call these "subtomograms inside subtomogras" subboxes. They are used to extract subunits from a previously extracted bigger macromolecule. Sometimes, it may happen that these subboxes cannot be cropped from the subtomogram, if the subtomogram has been cropped too tight (a too small sidelength was used).
imagine that you have a data folder, containing a crop.tbl file and the two auxiliary doc files keeping track of the original model and tomogram of each subtomogram.
Task: Use subboxing tools to produce a subboxing table that can crop the directly the subboxes from the original tomograms.