by Lucent on 7/22/19, 12:20 PM
I'm currently rebuilding this from the ground up mostly to replace my handmade animations with CSS transitions. Both the old and new were built with no JS frameworks or libraries and the one you're looking at does well in IE6, to give you an idea of how long ago it was refreshed.
by stochastimus on 7/22/19, 4:24 AM
I like this resource for learning about the elements, esp. the drill-down, which makes it fast to go back-and-forth. Also the "Wide" view is cool - I don't remember how long it took me initially to realize that the lanthanide / actinide rows actually belong in the middle of the other ones. :)
by alexkearns on 7/22/19, 6:33 AM
by foobarian on 7/22/19, 12:00 PM
by nsajko on 7/22/19, 3:05 PM
by zhirzh on 7/22/19, 8:13 AM
I saw this first back in school in 2013 and was instantly blown away. It was like the perodic table came to life.
Perhaps this is one of the influences that eventually led me to become a software dev
by master-litty on 7/22/19, 7:55 AM
I took a chemistry class back in 2012 or 2013 and used this a lot :) It's been around for longer than 2017, as the title may imply.
by BalinKing on 7/22/19, 12:42 PM
Nice resource, I personally found it very handy during Gen Chem (especially the orbital listings for each element)!
by tempodox on 7/22/19, 6:06 AM
Very nice. This is how a cheat sheet, er, reference should be.
by quickthrower2 on 7/22/19, 6:08 AM
Good old useful page with a single banner ad. Takes me back.
by gulabjamyn on 7/22/19, 5:29 AM
I've been using it for over a year. Great resource.