ACS Spring ConferenceChemical Markup Language (CML) is an XML-conformant Schema that describes molecules, spectra, reactions, and computational chemistry. It is capable of capturing the chemistry in a variety of current publications and is becoming adopted by many organizations. We have developed tools for batch conversion of current chemical documents such as primary journal publications and theses into conformant CML. The parser reads many text and molecular formats and extracts chemical concepts into CML that are combined to give a single XML file. The process works well for methodology and analytical data in organic synthesis. The results are stored in an XML database where they can be queried on molecular identity and numeric quantit...
: This paper introduces a subdomain chemistry format for storing computational chemistry data called...
We describe how a collection of documents expressed in XML-conforming languages such as CML and XHTM...
The semantic architecture of CML consists of conventions, dictionaries and units. The conventions co...
We review recent developments which employ extensible markup languages (XML) as information descript...
A set of components (CMLReact) for managing chemical and biochemical reactions has been added to CML...
High-throughput computation of molecules and crystals is supported through an XML infrastructure bas...
CMLSpect is an extension of Chemical Markup Language (CML) for managing spectral and other analytica...
Proceedings of the 2004 e-Science All Hands Meeting, 31st August - 3rd September, Nottingham UKThis ...
Within the eMinerals project we have been making increasing use of CML (the Chemical Markup Language...
Contains fulltext : 60101.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Examples of th...
Examples of the use of the RSS 1.0 (RDF Site Summary) specification together with CML (Chemical Mark...
Within the eMinerals project we have been making increasing use of CML (the Chemical Markup \u...
We describe an online resource in the form of this journal article for comparing the molecular const...
Within the eMinerals project we have been making increasing use of CML (the Chemical Markup Language...
CMLLite is a collection of definitions and processes which provide strong and flexible validation fo...
: This paper introduces a subdomain chemistry format for storing computational chemistry data called...
We describe how a collection of documents expressed in XML-conforming languages such as CML and XHTM...
The semantic architecture of CML consists of conventions, dictionaries and units. The conventions co...
We review recent developments which employ extensible markup languages (XML) as information descript...
A set of components (CMLReact) for managing chemical and biochemical reactions has been added to CML...
High-throughput computation of molecules and crystals is supported through an XML infrastructure bas...
CMLSpect is an extension of Chemical Markup Language (CML) for managing spectral and other analytica...
Proceedings of the 2004 e-Science All Hands Meeting, 31st August - 3rd September, Nottingham UKThis ...
Within the eMinerals project we have been making increasing use of CML (the Chemical Markup Language...
Contains fulltext : 60101.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Examples of th...
Examples of the use of the RSS 1.0 (RDF Site Summary) specification together with CML (Chemical Mark...
Within the eMinerals project we have been making increasing use of CML (the Chemical Markup \u...
We describe an online resource in the form of this journal article for comparing the molecular const...
Within the eMinerals project we have been making increasing use of CML (the Chemical Markup Language...
CMLLite is a collection of definitions and processes which provide strong and flexible validation fo...
: This paper introduces a subdomain chemistry format for storing computational chemistry data called...
We describe how a collection of documents expressed in XML-conforming languages such as CML and XHTM...
The semantic architecture of CML consists of conventions, dictionaries and units. The conventions co...