Dear Kaare,
That depends a bit on what you mean by 'save'.
The normal way of working is that all information is kept together in a
set of interconnected XML files and you work from that. To save this way
you go to the Project->Save menu in the top menu bar. When you open a new
project this sets up a standard location for the data (based on the
directory you are running in), but you can decide yourself where the data
go.
If you want to export you data to e.g. comma-separated ascii table, you
first open your peak list in the PeakList viewer popup, and then use
right-mouse->export to export it. You can select which columns to export,
and you can sort or select sets of rows before you export.
FormatConverter is only used if you want to export data to a non-CCPN
format, like Sparky.
We generally recommend to use native CCPN (XML) format for daily work, and
only use export/import for special purposes. Inside the CCPN format the
relationships between peaks, shifts, resonances, sepctra, constraint
lists, etc. is all kept consistent. When you export and import yuou
generally lose some of the consistency, and need complicated algorithms
and/or user input to reconnect the imported peak list to the existing
data. This is what FormatConverter does.
I hope this answers your question. If not, please mail again with more
details.
Yours,
Rasmus
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Dr. Rasmus H. Fogh Email: [log in to unmask]
Dept. of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge,
80 Tennis Court Road, Cambridge CB2 1GA, UK. FAX (01223)766002
On Fri, 15 Jun 2007, Kaare Teilum wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I just moved from Sparky to Analysis. It seems to me that the only way to
> save a peak list is to go through to FormatConverter - is that right?
> If it is I would suggest to implement a "Save peak list" bottom in the Peak
> List Editor window. This bottom should just dump the information in the
> window into a text file.
>
> Kaare
>
> ---
> Dr. Kaare Teilum
> Assistant Professor
> Department of Molecular Biology
> University of Copenhagen
>
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