//Open Source Chemistry Dictionary//
//Created by Adam M. Azman//
//8 February 2008//
//Technical help from Brian J. Azman//
//Special thanks to David Bradley//

//The Chemical Dictionary was developed with the assistance of ChemSpider,//
//a free access structure centric community for chemists.//
//Visit www.chemspider.com.//



***
//This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States License.//
//To view a copy of this license,//
//visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/ or//
//send a letter to Creative Commons,//
//171 Second Street, Suite 300,//
//San Francisco, California, 94105, USA.//
***




//Have a question? comment? suggestion for improvement? notice a misspelled word? want me to add your own custom dictionary to our master list?//
//Email me at chemdictionary@gmail.com//
//Thank you for helping me make this dictionary as complete and accurate as possible!//




Chemistry Dictionary for Word Processing

version 2.0 
104,502 words

**To update an older version of the dictionary:
1) Download the chem-dict.zip file
2) Extract all of the files to the folder into which the previous version of the dictionary was extracted
3) When a warning message tells you the files already exist, click the appropriate button to overwrite the previous files
4) If any documents are currently open, they need to be completely closed and reopened.  Updated dictionary should begin working immediately.



**First time installation:

Microsoft Office Insallation (Windows Operating System)

1) Download the chem-dic.zip file
2) Open the zipped folder and select "Extract All" from the File menu
3) Select "Next" to begin the Extraction Wizard
4) Click "Browse..."
5) Select "My Documents" and click "Make New Folder"
6) Rename the "New Folder" to "dictionary" and click "OK"
7) Click "Next" to begin the extraction
8) Click "Finish" to exit the Extraction Wizard
9) Open Microsoft Word

For Microsoft Office 2007:

10) Click on the Windows Office button at the top left of the menu and select "Word Options"
11) Click "Custom Dictionaries" under the "Proofing" tab

For other Microsoft Office versions:

10) Select "Options" from the "Tools" menu
11) Click "Custom Dictionaries" under the "Spelling and Grammar" tab


12) Click "Add"
13) Navigate to "My Documents\dictionary"
14) Select "chemistry.dic" and click "Open"
15) Click "OK" to exit the Custom Dictionaries window
16) click "OK" to exit the Options window





Microsoft Office (Macintosh Operating System)

1) Save ChemDictMac to Users:yourusername:Library:Preferences:Microsoft:
2) Open Word
3) Select Preferences from the Word menu
4) Select Custom Dictionary from the Spelling and Grammar tab
5) Click Add
6) Browse to Users:yourusername:Library:Preferences:Microsoft:ChemDictMac.dic
7) Click OK






OpenOffice.org Writer Installation (Windows Operating System)

1) Download the chem-dic.zip file
2) Open the zipped folder and select "Extract All" from the File menu
3) Select "Next" to begin the Extraction Wizard
4) Click "Browse..."
5) Browse to "My Computer\C:\Program Files\OpenOffice.org 2.3\share\dict\ooo"
6) Click "Next" to begin the extraction
7) When the "Confirm File Replace" window alerts you that a file already exists, click "Yes" to replace the existing file
8) Click "Finish" to exit the Extraction Wizard




Ubuntu Feisty Fawn

**You need root privileges to complete this instal**

1) Download the chem-dic.zip file
2) Open the zipped folder and select "Extract" from the "Archive" menu
3) Navigate to "File System\usr\lib\openoffice\share\dict\ooo" and click "Extract"
4) If a window alerts you that a file already exists, click "Yes" to replace the existing file
5) Click "Finish to exit the Extract wizard






File history
-------


Version 1.0
8 February 2008

-Combed several online chemistry glossaries for "misspelled" terms
-Created initial dictionary list (~8,000 entries) and added conjugations
-Vetted list against Crimmins Group Publications, and JACS, JOC, and OL ASAPs for missed words

-------

Version 1.1
8 February 2008

-Added computer-generated list of ~ 10,000 systematic derivatives of common chemical backbones
-Dictionary list now ~18,000 entries

-------

Version 2.0
4 December 2008

-Expanded list dramatically with addition of all valid entries from ChemSpider's identifier database.  Special thanks to ChemSpider.com
-Added small list of American and European chemists names.
-Dictionary list now ~104,000 entries