WOM: An object model for MediaWiki’s Wikitext
Wikipedia is a rich encyclopedia that is not only of great use to its contributors and readers but also to researchers and providers of third party software around Wikipedia. However, Wikipedia’s...
View ArticleDesign and Implementation of the Sweble Wikitext Parser: Unlocking the...
We will be presenting our paper on the design and implementation of the Sweble Wikitext Parser at the WikiSym 2011 conference! The conference will take place in Mountain View, CA in October. For those...
View ArticleSweble is available on Maven Central
We are finally deploying releases of Sweble and related software to Maven Central. This has many advantages for users of our software, among others: You don’t have to refer to our Maven repositories...
View ArticleSweble 1.1.0 released
Sweble 1.1.0 fixes some bugs and introduces a couple of new features/modules. For a full list of changes please refer to the changes reports of the individual modules. The release can be found on maven...
View ArticleGoogle-Sponsored Sweble 2.0 Alpha Released
We released an early 2.0 (alpha) version of the Sweble Wikitext parser and related libraries on our git repository and as maven artifacts. The Sweble Wikitext parser aims to provide a...
View ArticleSweble on GitHub and Ohloh
The Sweble Project can now be found on GitHub and Ohloh. The GitHub repositories mirror the primary repositories hosted on our servers. Commits pushed to our repositories will be pushed to GitHub after...
View ArticleDesign and Implementation of Wiki Content Transformations and Refactorings
Abstract: The organic growth of wikis requires constant attention by contributors who are willing to patrol the wiki and improve its content structure. However, most wikis still only offer textual...
View ArticleSweble 2.0 released!
Two years after our first public release of the Google-Sponsored Sweble 2.0 Alpha, we are happy to announce the release of Sweble 2.0! The most important innovation in the alpha release was the...
View ArticleFine-grained Change Detection in Structured Text Documents (DocEng 2014)
Abstract: Detecting and understanding changes between document revisions is an important task. The acquired knowledge can be used to classify the nature of a new document revision or to support a human...
View ArticleHD-Diff released as part of Sweble 2.0
HD-Diff is a tree-based algorithm to compute the differences between two documents. The algorithm was presented in a paper at the DocEng 2014 conference. Unlike other tree-based differencing algorithms...
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