forked from lijiext/lammps
190 lines
7.3 KiB
Plaintext
190 lines
7.3 KiB
Plaintext
"LAMMPS WWW Site"_lws - "LAMMPS Documentation"_ld - "LAMMPS Commands"_lc :c
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:link(lws,http://lammps.sandia.gov)
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:link(ld,Manual.html)
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:link(lc,Section_commands.html#comm)
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:line
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if command :h3
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[Syntax:]
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if boolean then t1 t2 ... elif boolean f1 f2 ... elif boolean f1 f2 ... else e1 e2 ... :pre
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boolean = a Boolean expression evaluated as TRUE or FALSE (see below)
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then = required word
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t1,t2,...,tN = one or more LAMMPS commands to execute if condition is met, each enclosed in quotes
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elif = optional word, can appear multiple times
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f1,f2,...,fN = one or more LAMMPS commands to execute if elif condition is met, each enclosed in quotes (optional arguments)
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else = optional argument
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e1,e2,...,eN = one or more LAMMPS commands to execute if no condition is met, each enclosed in quotes (optional arguments) :ul
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[Examples:]
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if "$\{steps\} > 1000" then quit
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if "$\{myString\} == a10" then quit
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if "$x <= $y" then "print X is smaller = $x" else "print Y is smaller = $y"
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if "($\{eng\} > 0.0) || ($n < 1000)" then &
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"timestep 0.005" &
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elif $n<10000 &
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"timestep 0.01" &
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else &
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"timestep 0.02" &
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"print 'Max step reached'"
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if "$\{eng\} > $\{eng_previous\}" then "jump file1" else "jump file2" :pre
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[Description:]
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This command provides an if-then-else capability within an input
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script. A Boolean expression is evaluted and the result is TRUE or
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FALSE. Note that as in the examples above, the expression can contain
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variables, as defined by the "variable"_variable.html command, which
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will be evaluated as part of the expression. Thus a user-defined
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formula that reflects the current state of the simulation can be used
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to issue one or more new commands.
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If the result of the Boolean expression is TRUE, then one or more
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commands (t1, t2, ..., tN) are executed. If it is FALSE, then Boolean
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expressions associated with successive elif keywords are evaluated
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until one is found to be true, in which case its commands (f1, f2,
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..., fN) are executed. If no Boolean expression is TRUE, then the
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commands associated with the else keyword, namely (e1, e2, ..., eN),
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are executed. The elif and else keywords and their associated
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commands are optional. If they aren't specified and the initial
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Boolean expression is FALSE, then no commands are executed.
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The syntax for Boolean expressions is described below.
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Each command (t1, f1, e1, etc) can be any valid LAMMPS input script
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command, except an "include"_include.html command, which is not
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allowed. If the command is more than one word, it must enclosed in
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quotes, so it will be treated as a single argument, as in the examples
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above.
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NOTE: If a command itself requires a quoted argument (e.g. a
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"print"_print.html command), then double and single quotes can be used
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and nested in the usual manner, as in the examples above and below.
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See "Section_commands 2"_Section_commands.html#cmd_2 of the manual for
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more details on using quotes in arguments. Only one of level of
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nesting is allowed, but that should be sufficient for most use cases.
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Note that by using the line continuation character "&", the if command
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can be spread across many lines, though it is still a single command:
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if "$a < $b" then &
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"print 'Minimum value = $a'" &
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"run 1000" &
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else &
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'print "Minimum value = $b"' &
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"minimize 0.001 0.001 1000 10000" :pre
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Note that if one of the commands to execute is "quit"_quit.html, as in
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the first example above, then executing the command will cause LAMMPS
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to halt.
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Note that by jumping to a label in the same input script, the if
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command can be used to break out of a loop. See the "variable
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delete"_variable.html command for info on how to delete the associated
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loop variable, so that it can be re-used later in the input script.
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Here is an example of a loop which checks every 1000 steps if the
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system temperature has reached a certain value, and if so, breaks out
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of the loop to finish the run. Note that any variable could be
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checked, so long as it is current on the timestep when the run
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completes. As explained on the "variable"_variable.html doc page,
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this can be insured by includig the variable in thermodynamic output.
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variable myTemp equal temp
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label loop
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variable a loop 1000
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run 1000
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if "$\{myTemp\} < 300.0" then "jump SELF break"
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next a
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jump SELF loop
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label break
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print "ALL DONE" :pre
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Here is an example of a double loop which uses the if and
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"jump"_jump.html commands to break out of the inner loop when a
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condition is met, then continues iterating thru the outer loop.
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label loopa
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variable a loop 5
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label loopb
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variable b loop 5
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print "A,B = $a,$b"
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run 10000
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if "$b > 2" then "jump SELF break"
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next b
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jump in.script loopb
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label break
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variable b delete
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next a
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jump SELF loopa :pre
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:line
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The Boolean expressions for the if and elif keywords have a C-like
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syntax. Note that each expression is a single argument within the if
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command. Thus if you want to include spaces in the expression for
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clarity, you must enclose the entire expression in quotes.
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An expression is built out of numbers (which start with a digit or
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period or minus sign) or strings (which start with a letter and can
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contain alphanumeric characters or underscores):
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0.2, 100, 1.0e20, -15.4, etc
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InP, myString, a123, ab_23_cd, etc :pre
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and Boolean operators:
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A == B, A != B, A < B, A <= B, A > B, A >= B, A && B, A || B, !A :pre
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Each A and B is a number or string or a variable reference like $a or
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$\{abc\}, or A or B can be another Boolean expression.
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If a variable is used it can produce a number when evaluated, like an
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"equal-style variable"_variable.html. Or it can produce a string,
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like an "index-style variable"_variable.html. For an individual
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Boolean operator, A and B must both be numbers or must both be
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strings. You cannot compare a number to a string.
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Expressions are evaluated left to right and have the usual C-style
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precedence: the unary logical NOT operator "!" has the highest
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precedence, the 4 relational operators "<", "<=", ">", and ">=" are
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next; the two remaining relational operators "==" and "!=" are next;
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then the logical AND operator "&&"; and finally the logical OR
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operator "||" has the lowest precedence. Parenthesis can be used to
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group one or more portions of an expression and/or enforce a different
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order of evaluation than what would occur with the default precedence.
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When the 6 relational operators (first 6 in list above) compare 2
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numbers, they return either a 1.0 or 0.0 depending on whether the
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relationship between A and B is TRUE or FALSE. When the 6 relational
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operators compare 2 strings, they also return a 1.0 or 0.0 for TRUE or
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FALSE, but the comparison is done by the C function strcmp().
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When the 3 logical operators (last 3 in list above) compare 2 numbers,
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they also return either a 1.0 or 0.0 depending on whether the
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relationship between A and B is TRUE or FALSE (or just A). The
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logical AND operator will return 1.0 if both its arguments are
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non-zero, else it returns 0.0. The logical OR operator will return
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1.0 if either of its arguments is non-zero, else it returns 0.0. The
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logical NOT operator returns 1.0 if its argument is 0.0, else it
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returns 0.0. The 3 logical operators can only be used to operate on
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numbers, not on strings.
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The overall Boolean expression produces a TRUE result if the result is
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non-zero. If the result is zero, the expression result is FALSE.
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:line
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[Restrictions:] none
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[Related commands:]
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"variable"_variable.html, "print"_print.html
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[Default:] none
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