Software

On-Line Tools

CCPB hosts the on-line tool COCO. To access this tool click here.



CCPB Software Repository

The CCPB Software repository has been built to allow CCPB members to share non-commercial software that may by useful to others.

All of the software listed on this page is available for download in GZIP-compressed Tar format (by clicking on the download icon associated with each piece of software). Further details about each piece of software, including the License Agreement covering usage and how to install the software can be viewed in the accompany README file (accessed by clicking on the information icon).

If you have software that you think may be useful to others that you would like to freely share via this software repository then you may upload them onto our server using the 'upload software' link to the left.

All of the software provided within this repository has been supplied by CCPB members in the hope that they will be useful. CCPB therefore distributes this software without any warranty, including any implied warranty or fitness for a particular purpose. If you encounter any problems using any of this software then please contact the author of the software (by clicking on the email icon associated with each piece of software) and not CCPB.

If you feel that a piece of software should be removed from this repository please contact CCPB via the link to the left stating the reasons why you would like the software to be removed.


PCAZIP

The latest release of the PCAZIP trajectory compression and analysis toolkit. Can now read more trajectory file formats, including gzipped, binpos, and dcd formats


Version: 3.2
Architecture: Any
File Size: 6.2Mb
Submitted by: Charlie Laughton, School of Pharmacy, University of Nottingham, UK.
Date added: 16/02/2009
Porcupine_Plots_Script

This perlscript generates porcupine plots that enable visualisation of eigenvectors. *NOTE:* This script uses outputs from programs in the PCAZIP suite.


Version: 2.0
Architecture: Any
File Size: 16Kb
Submitted by: Shozeb Haider, School of Pharmacy, University of London, UK.
Date added: 13/10/2008