Skip to main content

A parser for SHELXL results files

Project description

Shelxfile

Packaging status

Unit tests Contributions

This is a full implementation of the SHELXL[1] file syntax. Additionally it is able to edit SHELX properties using Python. The implementation is Python3-only and supports SHELXL after 2017 (You should not use old versions anyway). Shelxfile may eventually become a new heart of DSR[2] and is already used as file parser in StructureFinder[3].

Shelxfile always keeps the file order intact. Every SHELX instruction like DFIX or an atom is stored as an class object in the list Shelxfile._reslist. When writing the Shelxfile content to disk, it wites the _reslist content to disk.

Shelxfile tries to detect all possible syntax errors that SHELXL would not like either. If Shelxfile.DEBUG is True, more output about syntax and other errors are printed out. Otherwise, the parser is quiet except for really severe errors like a missing unit cell.

Not every part of Shelxfile is complete, for example it will not recognize if you add restraints with atom names that are not in the SHELX file. Please help me improving it!

Source Code

You can find the ShelXfile source code at GitHub.

Examples:

pip install shelxfile

>>> from shelxfile import Shelxfile
>>> shx = Shelxfile(verbose=True) # or debug=True, debug will halt on errors.
>>> shx.read_file('src/tests/resources/p21c.res')  # or .read_string() 
>>> shx.cell
CELL 0.71073 10.5086 20.9035 20.5072 90 94.13 90

>>> list(shx.cell)
[10.5086, 20.9035, 20.5072, 90.0, 94.13, 90.0]

>>> shx.cell.volume
4493.047384590458

>>> shx.cell.a
10.5086

>>> shx.to_cif('test.cif')  
# Writes a CIF file from the content of p21c.res

# You can overwrite any parameter in a shelx file:
>>> shx.plan
PLAN 20

>>> shx.plan.npeaks
20

>>> shx.plan.set('PLAN 30')
>>> shx.plan
PLAN 30

>>> shx.atoms
O1     3    0.074835    0.238436    0.402457   -31.00000    0.01579    0.03095      0.01852   -0.00468   -0.00210    0.01153
C1     1    0.028576    0.234542    0.337234   -31.00000    0.02311    0.03617      0.01096   -0.01000    0.00201    0.00356
C2     1    0.121540    0.194460    0.298291   -31.00000    0.02960    0.04586      0.01555   -0.00485   -0.00023    0.01102
F
...

>>> shx.atoms.hydrogen_atoms
[Atom ID: 81, Atom ID: 88, Atom ID: 95, ... ]

>>> shx.atoms.hydrogen_atoms[1].name
'H32'

>>> shx.atoms.n_hydrogen_atoms
24

# Atoms with a riding model e.g. hydrogen atom riding on a carbon atom:
>>> shx.atoms.riding_atoms
[Atom ID: 81, Atom ID: 88, Atom ID: 95, ... ]

>>> a = shx.atoms.get_atom_by_name('F1_2')  # Atom F1 in residue 2
>>> a
Atom ID: 258  # <- The Atom ID is the index number in the Shelxfile._reslist list

>>> str(a)
'F1    4    0.245205    0.192674    0.649231   -21.00000    0.05143    0.03826    0.03193   -0.00579   -0.01865   -0.00485'

>>> a.to_isotropic()
>>> str(a)
'F1    4    0.245205    0.192674   0.649231  -21.00000    0.04000'

>>> a.position  # position in the SHELX .res file
273

>>> str(shx._reslist[273])  # In regular code, do not access shx._reslist directly!
'F1    4    0.245205    0.192674   0.649231  -21.00000    0.04000'

>>> a.name
'F1'

>>> a.element
'F'

# Introduce a new element
>>> a.element = 'Na'
>>> shx.sfac_table
SFAC C  H  O  F  Al  Ga  Na

>>> a.resinum
2

>>> a.part
2

>>> shx.sfac2elem(4)
'F'

>>> shx.elem2sfac('F')
4

>>> a.find_atoms_around(dist=2.0, only_part=1)
[Atom ID: 254, Atom ID: 256, Atom ID: 260]  # Found some atoms 

>>> [str(x) for x in a.find_atoms_around(dist=2.2, only_part=2)]
['C2     1    0.192984    0.140449    0.621265   -21.00000    0.04315    0.02747      0.02385    0.00686   -0.00757    0.00126', 
'F2     4    0.264027    0.090306    0.642441   -21.00000    0.06073    0.04450      0.03972    0.01630   -0.01260    0.01460', 
'F3     4    0.078582    0.131920    0.643529   -21.00000    0.05691    0.04955      0.03374    0.01040    0.01881    0.00375']

>>> a.cart_coords
[1.617897551082389, 4.027560959000001, 13.279336538026433]

>>> a.frac_coords
[0.245205, 0.192674, 0.649231]

>>> a.occupancy
1.0

>>> a.sfac_num
4

>>>[x for x in a.find_atoms_around(dist=2.5, only_part=2)]
[Atom ID: 254, Atom ID: 256, Atom ID: 260, Atom ID: 262]

>>> for x in a.find_atoms_around(dist=2.5, only_part=2):
...    x.delete()

>>> [x for x in a.find_atoms_around(dist=2.5, only_part=2)]
[]  # Atoms are now deleted from shx._reslist.

>>> shx.restraints
SADI_CCF3 0.02 C1 C2 C1 C3 C1 C4
SADI_CCF3 0.02 F1 C2 F2 C2 F3 C2 F4 C3 F5 C3 F6 C3 F7 C4 F8 C4 F9 C4
SADI_CCF3 0.04 C2 C3 C3 C4 C2 C4
SADI_CCF3 0.04 O1 C2 O1 C3 O1 C4
SADI_CCF3 0.04 F1 F2 F2 F3 F3 F1 F4 F5 F5 F6 F6 F4 F7 F8 F8 F9 F9 F7
...

>>> shx.restraints[1]
SADI_CCF3 0.02 C1 C2 C1 C3 C1 C4

str(shx.restraints[1])
'SADI_CCF3 0.02 C1 C2 C1 C3 C1 C4'

shx.restraints[1].residue_class
'CCF3'

# The residue class 'CCF3' has three residues with these numbers: 
>>> shx.restraints[1].residue_number
[4, 1, 2]

# The esd of the SADI restraint:
shx.restraints[1].s
0.02

Writes current shx object to test.ins All lines in Shelxfile._reslist get wrapped after 79 characters with " =\n " as specified by SHELXL during the file writing.

>>> shx.write_shelx_file('test.ins')

No matter if you loaded a .res or .ins file with refine(), SHELXL refines the structure of the Shelxfile() object:

>>> shx.insert_anis()
>>> shx.refine(2)

 Running SHELXL with "/usr/local/bin/shelxl -b3000 /Users/daniel/GitHub/Shelxfile/tests/p21c" and "L.S. 2"
 wR2 =  0.1143 before cycle   1 for   10786 data and    945 /    945 parameters
 wR2 =  0.1025 before cycle   2 for   10786 data and    945 /    945 parameters
 wR2 =  0.1006 before cycle   3 for   10786 data and      0 /    945 parameters
 SHELXL Version 2018/3
# Symmcards that are implied by lattice symmetry are generated on-the-fly:
>>> shx.symmcards
| 1  0  0|   | 0.0|
| 0  1  0| + | 0.0|
| 0  0  1|   | 0.0|

|-1  0  0|   | 0.0|
| 0 -1  0| + | 0.0|
| 0  0 -1|   | 0.0|

|-1  0  0|   | 0.0|
| 0  1  0| + | 0.5|
| 0  0 -1|   | 0.5|

| 1  0  0|   | 0.0|
| 0 -1  0| + |-0.5|
| 0  0  1|   |-0.5|

# Complete or "grow" structures with higher symmetry: 
>>> shx = Shelxfile('./tests/p-31c.res')
len(shx.atoms)
88
p = shx.grow()
len(p)
208

# The (bond) angle between three atoms:
>>> at1 = shx.atoms.get_atom_by_name('O1_4')
>>> at2 = shx.atoms.get_atom_by_name('C1_4')
>>> at3 = shx.atoms.get_atom_by_name('C2_4')
>>> shx.atoms.angle(at1, at2, at3)
109.688123

# The torsion angle between four atoms:
>>> at1 = shx.atoms.get_atom_by_name('O1')
>>> at2 = shx.atoms.get_atom_by_name('C1')
>>> at3 = shx.atoms.get_atom_by_name('C2')
>>> at4 = shx.atoms.get_atom_by_name('F1')
>>> shx.atoms.torsion_angle(at1, at2, at3, at4)
74.095731

and many more...

References

[1] http://shelx.uni-goettingen.de/, G. M. Sheldrick, Acta Cryst. (2015). C71, 3-8. https://doi.org/10.1107/S2053229614024218

[2] https://github.com/dkratzert/DSR

[3] https://github.com/dkratzert/StructureFinder

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

shelxfile-18.tar.gz (71.8 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

shelxfile-18-py3-none-any.whl (79.5 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file shelxfile-18.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: shelxfile-18.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 71.8 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/5.0.0 CPython/3.12.3

File hashes

Hashes for shelxfile-18.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 350cd397d027ddad2dac6eea99e6a474fdf7a1ed0a581b76b1ac555670a5427b
MD5 ccae3bc131d2377551f68852e6c212e1
BLAKE2b-256 da2ff9da02b91409303145e9f7b79c2f7bd6e1628862dcfe47b9e13ab32e6274

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file shelxfile-18-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: shelxfile-18-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 79.5 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/5.0.0 CPython/3.12.3

File hashes

Hashes for shelxfile-18-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 a97ece529e4e579509d09f422b01dea6d281f6a1c857ebc368d2c6241369517e
MD5 8b8d48bd7492debd4f176f7ad3eee498
BLAKE2b-256 deaebe1b91e59ed21ddbd426560d048bb46e9abfaf17e393a4f3fbdc2061d6a4

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page