Home
Manual
Packages
Global Index
Keywords
Quick Reference
|
functions in basfix.i -
baget
|
baget(file, varname)
read and return the (first) variable named VARNAME in FILE.
The obasis function opens files read-only. If you want to update
a PFB Basis-generated PDB file without altering its "@decorated"
variable names, open the file with updateb, then use baset to
modify variables. Since you can only change the entire variable
with baset, you may want to read it first with baget.
|
SEE ALSO:
|
obasis,
baset
|
baset
|
baset, file, varname, value
set the (first) variable named VARNAME in FILE to VALUE.
The obasis function opens files read-only. If you want to update
a PFB Basis-generated PDB file without altering its "@decorated"
variable names, open the file with updateb, then use baset to
modify variables. Since you can only change the entire variable
with baset, you may want to read it first with baget.
|
SEE ALSO:
|
obasis,
baget
|
basfix
|
#include "basfix.i"
Provides functions obasis, baset, and baget to try to cope with
Basis PDB file conventions.
By default, the openb function is overloaded by the obasis
function. The original openb is called basfix_openb. It is
unclear what side effects this might have, but they are probably
minor. If you want to preserve the original openb function, set
basfix= 1;
BEFORE you include basfix.i.
|
SEE ALSO:
|
obasis,
baset,
baget
|
obasis
|
file= obasis(filename)
or file= openb(filename)
or file= openb(filename, clogfile)
(If you typed help,openb and are reading this, then consider the
latter two forms. If you typed help,obasis, consider the first.
In either case, the original openb function is called basfix_openb.)
open the existing file FILENAME for read-only binary I/O.
(Use updateb or createb, respectively, to open an existing file
with read-write access or to create a new file.)
If the CLOGFILE argument is supplied, it represents the structure
of FILENAME in the Clog binary data description language.
After an openb, the file variable may be used to extract variables
from the file as if it were a structure instance. That is, the
expression "file.var" refers to the variable "var" in file "file".
A complete list of the variable names present in the file may
be obtained using the get_vars function. If the file contains
history records, the jt and jc functions may be used to set the
current record -- initially, the first record is current.
The restore function may be used to make memory copies of data
in the file; this will be faster than a large number of
references to "file.var".
|
SEE ALSO:
|
updateb,
createb,
open,
cd,
show,
jt,
jc,
restore,
get_vars,
get_times,
get_ncycs,
get_member,
has_records,
set_blocksize,
dump_clog,
read_clog,
recover_file,
openb_hooks,
open102,
close102,
get_addrs,
baset,
baget
|
|