This article discusses some common molecular file formats, including usage and converting between them. Chemical information is usually provided as files or streams and many formats have been created, with varying degrees of documentation. The format can be found by three means (see chemical MIME section) file extension (usually 3 letters). This is widely used, but fragile as common suffixes such as ". mol" and ". dat" are used by many systems, including non-chemical ones.

PropertyValue
dbpedia-owl:abstract
  • This article discusses some common molecular file formats, including usage and converting between them. Chemical information is usually provided as files or streams and many formats have been created, with varying degrees of documentation. The format can be found by three means (see chemical MIME section) file extension (usually 3 letters). This is widely used, but fragile as common suffixes such as ". mol" and ". dat" are used by many systems, including non-chemical ones. self-describing files where the format information is included in the file. Examples are CIF and CML. chemical/MIME type added by a chemically-aware server.
dbpedia-owl:wikiPageExternalLink
dcterms:subject
rdf:type
rdfs:comment
  • This article discusses some common molecular file formats, including usage and converting between them. Chemical information is usually provided as files or streams and many formats have been created, with varying degrees of documentation. The format can be found by three means (see chemical MIME section) file extension (usually 3 letters). This is widely used, but fragile as common suffixes such as ". mol" and ". dat" are used by many systems, including non-chemical ones.
rdfs:label
  • Chemical file format
owl:sameAs
foaf:page
is dbpprop:genre of
is owl:sameAs of
is foaf:primaryTopic of