@article{Rodriguez2015jsbml, title = {{JSBML 1.0: Providing a Smorgasbord of Options to Encode Systems Biology Models}}, author = {Rodriguez, Nicolas and Thomas, Alex and Watanabe, Leandro and Vazirabad, Ibrahim Y and Kofia, Victor and G{\'o}mez, Harold F and Mittag, Florian and Matthes, Jakob and Rudolph, Jan and Wrzodek, Finja and Netz, Eugen and Diamantikos, Alexander and Eichner, Johannes and Keller, Roland and Wrzodek, Clemens and Fr{\"o}hlich, Sebastian and Lewis, Nathan E and Myers, Chris J and Le Nov{\`e}re, Nicolas and Palsson, Bernhard {\O} and Hucka, Michael and Dr{\"a}ger, Andreas}, journal = {Bioinformatics}, year = {2015}, month = jun, volume = {31}, number = {20}, pages = {3383--3386}, issn = {1367-4803}, doi = {10.1093/bioinformatics/btv341}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btv341}, eprint = {https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article-pdf/31/20/3383/17087774/btv341.pdf}, pdf = {https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article-pdf/31/20/3383/17087774/btv341.pdf}, abstract = {Summary: JSBML, the official pure Java programming library for the SBML format, has evolved with the advent of different modeling formalisms in systems biology and their ability to be exchanged and represented via extensions of SBML. JSBML has matured into a major, active open-source project with contributions from a growing, international team of developers who not only maintain compatibility with SBML, but also drive steady improvements to the Java interface and promote ease-of-use with end users. Availability: Source code, binaries and documentation for JSBML can be freely obtained under the terms of the LGPL 2.1 from the website \url{http://sbml.org/Software/JSBML}. Supplementary Information: More information about JSBML can be found in the user guide at \url{http://sbml.org/Software/JSBML/docs/}. Contact: \url{mailto:jsbml-development@googlegroups.com}}, }