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chem-bla-ics

chem-bla-ics
Chemblaics (pronounced chem-bla-ics) is the science that uses open science and computers to solve problems in chemistry, biochemistry and related fields.
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GitCdkQuímicaInglês
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Some of you heard me complain about commit messages resulting from git cherry-pick which allows me to apply patches from CDK trunk to a branch, without needing to do a full merge of what happens in trunk. The commit messages would be identical, which made it seem that those original messages were mine.

GitCdkQuímicaInglês
Publicados

While slowly merging with Sweden , and ADSL which should reach my house in some two weeks, I am enjoying my new office space and Git to upload patches to the CDK. Christoph wondered if we should switch CDK from SVN to Git. A few developers objected, for various reasons: no native Windows clients (though msysgit might be the solution), no (stable) plugins for Eclipse, IDEA(?), etc.

CdkCheminfChemometricsCareerBioclipseQuímicaInglês
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The reason why I have not been able to blog much lately, is that my family and I have been moving to Uppsala/Sweden, where I’ll start a postdoc in the group of Jarl Wikberg @ BMC @ Uppsala University, where I’ll work on chemoinformatics in drug design, and the use of CDK and Bioclipse in particular.

JavascriptWebUbiquityQuímicaInglês
Publicados

Now, I’m really after something else, but here’s my first Ubiquity scripts. It allow you to select a DOI on any web page (which really only makes sense if it is not already a hyperlink), you hit ALT-SPACE (Linux), CTRL-SPACE (Windows), or whatever the shortcut is on your operating system, and type resolve-doi and it will automatically convert the DOI into a hyperlink to look up the paper.

CmlCdkInchiUsefulchemQuímicaInglês
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Cameron, Jean-Claude and I were invited to Peter’s place in Cambridge, where we are now hacking on CMLReact for the Ugi reactions Jean-Claude has been working on. I just finished a script that uses the CDK and Sam’s interface to the InChI library to convert a list of four reactants and one Ugi product into CMLReact (doi:10.1021/ci0502698). The full BeanShell script looks like:

BioclipseCmlUgiUsefulchemQuímicaInglês
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The nice thing about a hacksession, is that you have something to write about. Below a screenshot of a Ugi reaction in Bioclipse… note the source tab of the editor, which holds the CML.