Name to Structure or Reaction

Question types ::: qtype_easyoname
Maintained by Carl LeBlond
Part of set EasyOChem.
Name to structure (or reaction) question type. You can ask studnts to draw chemical structures or reactions. This plugin requires Marvin Applets from Chemaxon.

Name to Structure or Reaction 1.0

Moodle 2.3, 2.4, 2.5, 2.6, 2.7
Released: Friday, 3 October 2014, 1:02 AM
Moodle 2.3+ plugin: Marvinsketch Name to Structure (EasyOName) question type

By Carl LeBlond


INSTALLATION:

This will NOT work with Moodle 2.0 or older, since it uses the new
question API implemented in Moodle 2.1.

This is a Moodle question type. It should come as a self-contained
"easyomech" folder which should be placed inside the "question/type" folder
which already exists on your Moodle web server.

Once you have done that, visit your Moodle admin page - the database
tables should automatically be upgraded to include an extra table for
the EasyOChem Mechanism question type.

You must download a recent copy of Marvinsketch from www.chemaxon.com (free for academic use)
and intall it in folder named "marvin" at your web root.

USAGE:

The Name to structure question can be used to design questions in whch you require students
to draw chemical structures or reactions schemes.

Version information

Version build number
2014100200
Version release name
1.0
Maturity
Stable version
MD5 Sum
b7470d72b6cf088a6af9246d74d32d8e
Supported software
Moodle 2.3, Moodle 2.4, Moodle 2.5, Moodle 2.6, Moodle 2.7
  • Latest release for Moodle 2.3
  • Latest release for Moodle 2.4
  • Latest release for Moodle 2.5
  • Latest release for Moodle 2.6
  • Latest release for Moodle 2.7

Version control information

Version control system (VCS)
GIT
VCS repository URL

Default installation instructions for plugins of the type Question types

  1. Make sure you have all the required versions.
  2. Download and unpack the module.
  3. Place the folder (eg "myquestiontype") in the "question/type" subdirectory.
  4. Visit http://yoursite.com/admin to finish the installation