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The philosophy of the website is a bit different from the information in the paper. The paper (S9 and elsewhere) is code-centered (i.e. you see all elements for one code), whereas the website is element-centered (=you see all codes for one element). Both are useful. But it may not be intuitive for someone who read the paper and is sent to the website that information such as the pictures in S9 cannot be generated on the website. How hard would it be to take the present element-centered approach as being one tab (‘per element’), and to accompany it with a second tab (‘per code’) that generates periodic tables as in the paper? (such developments can be done independently from the submission process, and also after the submission/acceptance). underlying philosophy: the more ways you offer to visitors to play with the data, the more likely they are to make use of it, to come back to the site, to publish results based upon these data, etc.
Suggestion by Stefaan Cottenier
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
The philosophy of the website is a bit different from the information in the paper. The paper (S9 and elsewhere) is code-centered (i.e. you see all elements for one code), whereas the website is element-centered (=you see all codes for one element). Both are useful. But it may not be intuitive for someone who read the paper and is sent to the website that information such as the pictures in S9 cannot be generated on the website. How hard would it be to take the present element-centered approach as being one tab (‘per element’), and to accompany it with a second tab (‘per code’) that generates periodic tables as in the paper? (such developments can be done independently from the submission process, and also after the submission/acceptance). underlying philosophy: the more ways you offer to visitors to play with the data, the more likely they are to make use of it, to come back to the site, to publish results based upon these data, etc.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: