Difference between revisions of "End-of-line"

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Note: There will never be two consecutive character 10, because this is the end-of-tag signal.
 
Note: There will never be two consecutive character 10, because this is the end-of-tag signal.
  
Conclusion, when reading tags, the 10, shoudl be ignored and then the \ be replace with 10.
+
Conclusion, when reading tags, the 10, should be ignored and then the \ be replace with 10.
When writing, the 10 should always come with a backslash.
+
When writing, the 10 should always come after a backslash.

Revision as of 09:27, 2 May 2019

NMReDATA tags use backslash("\") as end-of-line character. This is because some functions of CDK libraries sometimes ignore end-of-line (char 10) and because the NMReDATA format needs an line separator we introduced the backslash. When reading tags, we have to ignore the usual end-of-line character (ASCII code 10) except for Version 1 of the NMReDATA.

Tag should look like this...

>  <NMREDATA_ASSIGNMENT>
A, 48.3010, 1 ;the label "A" corresponds to the atom one which is the carbon of the CH2\
B, 20.3220, 2 ;atom two is the carbon of the CH3\
a, 2.6100, H3 ;"H3" refers to the hydrogen atom of atom 3 (the oxygen)\
b, 4.8020, H1 ;"H1" refers to the hydrogen atoms of atom 1 (of the CH2)\
c, 1.4010, H2\

but it may look like this

> <NMREDATA_ASSIGNMENT>

A, 48.3010, 1 ;the label "A" corresponds to the atom one which is the carbon of the CH2\
B, 20.3220, 
2 ;atom two is the carbon of the CH3\
a, 2.61
00, H3 ;"H3" refers to the hydrogen atom of atom 3 (the oxygen)\
b, 4.8020, H1 ;"H1" refers to the hydrogen 
atoms of atom 1 (of the CH2)\
c, 1.4010, H2\

Note: There will never be two consecutive character 10, because this is the end-of-tag signal.

Conclusion, when reading tags, the 10, should be ignored and then the \ be replace with 10. When writing, the 10 should always come after a backslash.