From: LMH <lmh...@mo...> - 2012-12-12 21:28:10
|
Angel Herráez wrote: > @LMH, > > see for example a simple demo of table with images of structures generated > on the fly from MOLdata: > > http://biomodel.uah.es/en/DIY/ChemDoodle/2d-viewer_4.7.0/test1.htm > > That should be easy to connect to whatever you use to generate the html > page and table, right? > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > LogMeIn Rescue: Anywhere, Anytime Remote support for IT. Free Trial > Remotely access PCs and mobile devices and provide instant support > Improve your efficiency, and focus on delivering more value-add services > Discover what IT Professionals Know. Rescue delivers > http://p.sf.net/sfu/logmein_12329d2d > _______________________________________________ > Jmol-users mailing list > Jmo...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/jmol-users > This looks pretty good. As long as there is an element that I can just stick in a td tag, then it should play nicely with any other html code I may need. It looks like I just need to have, ChemDoodleWeb-libs.js ChemDoodleWeb.js in the directory with my html, is that right? I will need this to be dynamic, meaning that I won't be able to hard code the number of rows and such, but that is a question for the ruby code that will generate the webpage. Can you do things like modify text color and such? LMHmedchem |