Thank you, Bob, for your rapid fix. As to your question: yes, I am learning that there is almost nothing that Jmol cannot do!
I’m not exactly sure what WebMO is doing, as installed on a computational server, so that it can receive/upload gaussian input files and run gaussian computations. If you are suggesting that there has to be something that could be installed on a server/web page, serving up the Jmol applet, that could execute gaussian jobs, I am certain that you are right. It’s what WebMO does, right? For anyone who wants to check out WebMO, which supports Gaussian, GAMESS, and eight(!) other computational engines, visit the demo server at http://www.webmo.net/demo/index.html. So, I agree that the “bit of extra interface” you mention is certainly do-able, but I’m not really sure how it’s done! Matt On Aug 31, 2015, at 8:06 PM, Robert Hanson <hans...@stolaf.edu<mailto:hans...@stolaf.edu>> wrote: It was a missing character at the end of the line just as the file was saved. Very easy fix. http://chemapps.stolaf.edu/jmol/zip/Jmol.jar fixes that. Question: Could you just use JSmol and a bit of extra interface to do this on the web? Obviously there's a lot more to WebMO than that -- scheduling and monitoring jobs, for instance. But still... Bob ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ _______________________________________________ Jmol-users mailing list Jmol-users@lists.sourceforge.net<mailto:Jmol-users@lists.sourceforge.net> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/jmol-users ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ _______________________________________________ Jmol-users mailing list Jmol-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/jmol-users