Worship your favorite molecule by setting it as your wallpaper.
Avogadrio is a web app that will render your favourite molecule as a desktop wallpaper from either a compund name or SMILES structure. Molecule rendering is designed to be powered by Sourire which itself wraps the Indigo cheminformatics toolkit. Built on the Silex micro-framework.
You'll need to have a web server installed and configured with PHP for this to work. I really recommend XAMPP, especially for Windows users. Once you've done that you can proceed.
You'll also need Node.js and npm installed and working.
A couple of files need changing to get the site working for you.
config/config.yaml.dist
and rename it to config.yaml
. Fill in the fields according to their descriptions and save.sourire_service
you'll want to point it to your local Sourire server. For example http://localhost:8080/
.templates/_analytics.html.twig
for your analytics code and templates/_donations.html.twig
for any donation buttons. Leave them blank if you like, but you must create them.Clone the project down and open the folder in your favourite editor. It's a JetBrains PhpStorm project but you can use whichever paid/free software takes your fancy.
Before anything else, note that this project uses the Composer package manager. Install composer (see their website) and run:
composer install
Or alternatively, if you're using the PHAR (make sure the php.exe
executable is in your PATH):
php composer.phar install
Then, install the npm packages necessary to build and run the website. Run the following in your terminal in the project root directory:
npm install
This will install Bower which will allow you to install the assets the website requires (Bootstrap, jQuery etc.) using the command:
bower install
Gulp will also have been installed. This will compile the Less and CoffeeScript into CSS and JavaScript ready for production. Do this using the command:
gulp
This command will need running again every time you make a change to a Less or CoffeeScript file. If you're working on them, run gulp watch
in a terminal to watch for file changes and compile accordingly.
A big thank you to: