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  2. XDrawChem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XDrawChem

    XDrawChem is a free software program for drawing chemical structural formulas, available for Unix and macOS. It is distributed under the GNU GPL . In Microsoft Windows this program is called WinDrawChem.

  3. JChemPaint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JChemPaint

    It is free and open-source software, released under a GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL). It is written in Java and so can run on the operating systems Windows , macOS , Linux , and Unix . There is a standalone application (editor), and two varieties of applet (editor and viewer) that can be integrated into web pages .

  4. JME Molecule Editor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JME_Molecule_Editor

    The JME Molecule Editor is a molecule editor Java applet with which users make and edit drawings of molecules and reactions (including generating substructure queries), and can display molecules within an HTML page. [1]

  5. ChemDraw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ChemDraw

    ChemDraw is a molecule editor first developed in 1985 by Selena "Sally" Evans, her husband David A. Evans, and Stewart Rubenstein [1] [2] (later by the cheminformatics company CambridgeSoft).

  6. Chemistry Development Kit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemistry_Development_Kit

    Free and open-source software portal Scholia has a topic profile for Chemistry Development Kit . Bioclipse – an Eclipse–RCP based chemo-bioinformatics workbench

  7. ChemWindow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ChemWindow

    ChemWindow is a chemical structure drawing molecule editor and publishing program now published by John Wiley & Sons as of 2020, [1] originally developed by Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc. [2] [3] It was first developed by SoftShell International in the 1990s. [4]

  8. The internet’s go-to homepage is popping off today. On Sept. 25, Google published its latest Doodle celebrating the worldwide appeal of popcorn. In addition to the art viewable on its homepage ...

  9. Molekel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molekel

    Molekel is a free software multiplatform molecular visualization program. [1] It was originally developed at the University of Geneva by Peter F. Flükiger in the 1990s for Silicon Graphics Computers. In 1998, Stefan Portmann took over responsibility and released Version 3.0. Version 4.0 was a nearly platform independent version.