<br/>
The value can also be specified as a sub-value:
<pre>
- jalview --open examples/uniref50.fa --structure [seqid=FER1+SPIOL,structureviewer=jmol,tempfac=plddt]examples/AlphaFold/AF-P00221-F1-model_v4.pdb
+ jalview --open examples/uniref50.fa --structure [seqid=FER1_SPIOL,structureviewer=jmol,tempfac=plddt]examples/AlphaFold/AF-P00221-F1-model_v4.pdb
</pre>
which is equivalent to
<pre>
- jalview --open examples/uniref50.fa --structure examples/AlphaFold/AF-P00221-F1-model_v4.pdb --tempfac plddt --seqid FER1+SPIOL
+ jalview --open examples/uniref50.fa --structure examples/AlphaFold/AF-P00221-F1-model_v4.pdb --tempfac plddt --seqid FER1_SPIOL
--structureviewer jmol
</pre>
<h3><a name="bgcolour"></a><code>‑‑bgcolour</code></h3>
<p>
- <strong>Only applies to <code>‑‑structureimage</code>.</strong> Specify a background colour for a structure image. The colour can be specified as a named colour recognised by Java (e.g. <code>"white"</code>, <code>"cyan"</code>) or as a #RRGGBB hash-6-digit-hex-string as used in web pages (e.g. <code>"#ffffff"</code>, <code>"#00ffff"</code>). Note that if you're using a hash in a bash-like shell then you should quote the string to avoid problems with it being interpreted as a comment character.
+ <strong>Only applies to <code>‑‑structureimage</code>.</strong> Specify a background colour for a structure image. The colour can be specified as a named colour recognised by Java (e.g. <code>"white"</code>, <code>"cyan"</code>) or as a RRGGBB 6 digit hex string (e.g. <code>ffffff</code>, <code>00ffff</code>).
</p>
<p>
E.g.