Tetrahedron Computer Methodology

The Tetrahedron Computer Methodology was a short lived journal that was published by Pergamon Press[1] (now Elsevier) to experiment with electronic submission of articles in the ChemText format,[2] and the sharing source code to enable reproducibility.[3][4][5] It was the first chemical journal to be published electronically,[6] with issues distributed in print and on floppy disks.[7] It is likely it was also the first journal to accept submissions in a non-paper format (on floppy disks).[1] The journal ceased publication owing to technical and non-technical reasons, and may have lacked sufficient institutional support.[8] The last issue appeared in 1992 but was dated 1990.[9]

Tetrahedron Computer Methodology
LanguageEnglish
Publication details
History1988-1992
Publisher
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Tetrahedron Comput. Methodol.
Indexing
CODENTCMTE6
ISSN0898-5529
LCCN2010219022
OCLC no.17847665
Links

References

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  1. ^ a b Adams, Stephen (June 2005). "Electronic non-text material in patent applications—some questions for patent offices, applicants and searchers". World Patent Information. 27 (2): 99–103. doi:10.1016/j.wpi.2004.12.005.
  2. ^ Richards, W. Graham; Burridge, Jane M. (29 September 1988). "Key work for the chemist". Nature. 335 (6189): 459–460. Bibcode:1988Natur.335..459R. doi:10.1038/335459a0. S2CID 4287118.
  3. ^ Stinson, Stephen (13 June 1988). "Computer journal aims at organic chemists". Chemical & Engineering News. 66 (24): 8–9. doi:10.1021/cen-v066n024.p008b.
  4. ^ Wipke, W. Todd (January 1990). "The Tetrahedron Computer Methodology Experiment". Tetrahedron Computer Methodology. 3 (6): 525–526. doi:10.1016/0898-5529(90)90153-Y.
  5. ^ Boumans, Paul Willy Joseph Maria, ed. (1990). Future trends in spectroscopy: Proceedings of the symposium held at the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, The Vatican, 27-28 June 1989, to mark the 50th anniversary of Spectrochimica Acta, 1939-1989. Pergamon Press and Pontificia Academia Scientiarum. ISBN 9788877610546. OCLC 22352624. Retrieved 2 January 2017.
  6. ^ Barton, Derek H.R. (January 1988). "Tetrahedron computer methodology and a new format for tetrahedron". Tetrahedron. 44 (10): iii. doi:10.1016/S0040-4020(88)90004-X.
  7. ^ Tetrahedron computer methodology. WorldCat. 1 January 1988. OCLC 17847665.
  8. ^ Heller, Stephen R. (1 May 1993). "Chemical information activities: What the future holds". Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling. 33 (3): 284–291. doi:10.1021/ci00013a001.
  9. ^ Warr, Wendy. "Twenty Five Years of Progress in Cheminformatics". www.warr.com. Wendy Warr & Associates. Retrieved 2 January 2017.
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