OctaDist

Crystallography and inorganic chemistry software From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

OctaDist is computer software for crystallography and inorganic chemistry program. It is mainly used for computing distortion parameters of coordination complex such as spin crossover complex (SCO), magnetic metal complex and metal–organic framework (MOF).

DeveloperOctaDist development team
Initial release8 January 2019; 7 years ago (2019-01-08)
Stable release
3.1.0 / 19 March 2024; 23 months ago (2024-03-19)
Written inPython (Tkinter)
Quick facts Developer, Initial release ...
OctaDist
DeveloperOctaDist development team
Initial release8 January 2019; 7 years ago (2019-01-08)
Stable release
3.1.0 / 19 March 2024; 23 months ago (2024-03-19)
Written inPython (Tkinter)
Operating systemWindows, macOS, Linux
PlatformIA-32, x86-64
Available inEnglish
TypeCrystallography, inorganic chemistry, cheminformatics
LicenseGPL 3.0
Websiteoctadist.github.io
Repositorygithub.com/OctaDist/OctaDist
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The program is developed and maintained in an international collaboration between the members of the Computational Chemistry Research Unit at Thammasat University,[1] the Functional Materials & Nanotechnology CoE at Walailak University[2] and the Switchable Molecules and Materials group at University of Bordeaux.[3]

OctaDist is written entirely in Python binding to Tkinter graphical user interface toolkit. It is available for Windows, macOS, and Linux. It is free and open-source software distributed under a GNU General Public License (GPL) 3.0.

Standard abilities

The following are the main features[4] of the latest version of OctaDist:

Capabilities

See also

References

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