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BioJava was conceived in 1999 by Thomas Down and Matthew Pocock as an API to simplify bioinformatics software development using Java (Pocock et al., 2000). It has since then evolved to become a fully-featured framework with modules for performing many common bioinformatics tasks.
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As a free and open-source project, BioJava is developed by volunteers coordinated by the Open Bioinformatics Foundation (OBF) and is one of several Bio* toolkits (Mangalam, 2002). Over the past eight years, the BioJava has brought together nearly fifty different code contributors, hundreds of mailing list subscribers, and several wiki contributors. All code and related documentation is distributed under version 2.1 of the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) license (Free Software Foundation, Inc., 1999). All wiki documentation is made available online under version 1.2 of the GNU Free Documentation License (Free Software Foundation, Inc., 2000).
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As a free and open-source project, BioJava is developed by volunteers coordinated by the Open Bioinformatics Foundation (O|B|F, http://open-bio.org/) and is one of several Bio* toolkits (Mangalam, 2002). Over the past eight years, the BioJava has brought together nearly fifty different code contributors, hundreds of mailing list subscribers, and several wiki contributors. All code and related documentation is distributed under version 2.1 of the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) license (Free Software Foundation, Inc., 1999). All wiki documentation is made available online under version 1.2 of the GNU Free Documentation License (Free Software Foundation, Inc., 2000).
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BioJava has been used in a number of real-world applications, including Bioclipse (Spjuth et al., 2007), BioWeka (Gewehr et al., 2007), Cytoscape (Shannon et al., 2003), and Taverna (Oinn et al., 2004), and has been referenced in over fifty published studies. A list of these can be found on the BioJava website.
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