Based on our record, MolView should be more popular than ImageJ. It has been mentiond 36 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Edit: I found molview.org which is very close to what I'm looking for. Is there a way to do full equations in the program? That would be more in line with that I'm looking for. Source: 5 months ago
** Author’s note: I’ll be trying to upload every 3-5 days, but life can get hectic. Also, chemical names will almost never be used, officially for story reasons. Definitely not because they give me intense flashbacks. DEFINITELY NOT. That being said, any descriptions of chemicals I end up using can be drawn here. Source: 10 months ago
The hexagons and pentagons (and sometimes others) are deliberately drawn as regular shapes to make them neater. Sometimes this is physically accurate (benzene rings are true perfect hexagons) while other times it is not (e.g. Cyclic structures with nitrogen atoms will be irregular due to different bond lengths). Here is a cool tool that shows the true 3D structure of a given molecule, which you can draw in... Source: 10 months ago
Alternatively, if you're interested in a novel/unmodelled molecule, you can generate ideal coordinates using many tools and webservers, either directly from the SMILES/InChi strings (i.e., here) or by drawing the compound out (i.e., here). Or you can of course build it in PyMOL, but that would be last on my personal list. Source: 11 months ago
In order to draw them, molview.org looks nice. Source: about 1 year ago
Through the use of a public domain program (ImageJ), I was able to extract different information from the image. Source: over 1 year ago
All my users get ImageJ[https://imagej.nih.gov/ij/]. Depending on needs, they can also get OsiriX, microdicom, or training on pydicom or matlab libraries. Source: over 1 year ago
The tool in question is called ImageJ. It's an open source piece of image analysis software, commonly used in biology for processing microscope images. It can do stuff like hyperstacks -- more than two dimensions, such as x,y, z (a microscope that scan vertically), t (time), c (multiple color channels). Source: about 2 years ago
I used an open source program called ImageJ that lets you measure things is a bunch of different ways. I took one measurement as a reference then used the program to figure out everything else. Source: over 2 years ago
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