Phil,

Installation is easy, but there is a limitation from my point of view. Installing it as a hidden movable object on a page does not seem to be an option. Its div tag does not seem to like tampering. Here it is installed as a pop-up hooked to Jmol. I could not get the load filter 2D to work, so there is no stereochemistry carried to Jmol. I'm simply using minimize addHydrogens:

http://chemagic.com/web_molecules/script_page_test.aspx

The link to the JSDraw is at the top of the page.

Basically, I like it, but the inability to make it pop up quickly as a small object on an existing page is a drawback.

I was going to write to the Chemene about JME files, but that's an issue that Jmol developers should probably initiate.

Otis

Otis Rothenberger
chemagic.com


On 6/30/2010 9:01 AM, Philip Bays wrote:
I just got notification this morning of a new release of JSDraw -- a structure drawing program that exports SMILES with a nice interface, written completed in JavaScript. I have not looked at it much yet, but it looks interesting. Anyone else have any experience with it?

http://www.chemene.com:8080/web/jsdraw.aspx

Phil

J. Philip Bays

Professor of Chemistry

Science Hall 172

Saint Mary's College

Notre Dame IN 46556

(574) 284-4663



------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This SF.net email is sponsored by Sprint
What will you do first with EVO, the first 4G phone?
Visit sprint.com/first -- http://p.sf.net/sfu/sprint-com-first


_______________________________________________
Jmol-users mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/jmol-users
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This SF.net email is sponsored by Sprint
What will you do first with EVO, the first 4G phone?
Visit sprint.com/first -- http://p.sf.net/sfu/sprint-com-first
_______________________________________________
Jmol-users mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/jmol-users

Reply via email to