Hi John Yes, welcome to the exciting world of Jmol. Do not hesitate to keep asking questions.
As Bob already gave you the clue, there is no need to solve your last problem, but just for enlightening, the issue was not related to smiles but to your trying to load a model into Jmol before this had finished loading. Running a jmolScript right after a jmolApplet tends to give this error. You must always put the script within the call to jmolApplet, as Bob indicated. Regarding your point of addressing the building of models, this page of mine may be of interest to you http://biomodel.uah.es/en/DIY/ and we can make a Thai translation if you think it fancy. It is already in 2 languages and can be run in local mode as well as through the net. I think that drawing the molecules will be more enlightening for users than dealing with the obscure SMILES codes. Re. the signed applet: it's not too obvious. Basically, you need it if you run things from different web servers, or if you want to be able to load and save files in local hard disk. Not sure about whether the smiles conversion needs it. On the other hand, the first time you run the signed applet in one computer, yes, it raises alarming bells. But if you click on the option that says like "trust this forever" they don't come up any longer. But users in other computers will hear them. The signed applet displays a "Jmol_S" frank in red in the lower right, while the unsigned applet displays a white (or black) "Jmol". ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ This SF.net email is sponsored by Make an app they can't live without Enter the BlackBerry Developer Challenge http://p.sf.net/sfu/RIM-dev2dev _______________________________________________ Jmol-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/jmol-users

