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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ANY23-390?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16587708#comment-16587708
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ASF GitHub Bot commented on ANY23-390:
--------------------------------------

GitHub user HansBrende opened a pull request:

    https://github.com/apache/any23/pull/118

    ANY23-390 implement ICal, JCal, and XCal extractors

    This is my first stab at implementing the ical, jcal, and xcal extractors.
    
    @lewismc Any input?

You can merge this pull request into a Git repository by running:

    $ git pull https://github.com/HansBrende/any23 ANY23-390

Alternatively you can review and apply these changes as the patch at:

    https://github.com/apache/any23/pull/118.patch

To close this pull request, make a commit to your master/trunk branch
with (at least) the following in the commit message:

    This closes #118
    
----
commit 54a92960ac2fda9510041b6886eb7259a9b1220b
Author: Hans <firedrake93@...>
Date:   2018-08-21T16:37:35Z

    ANY23-390 implement ICal, JCal, and XCal extractors

----


> Implement ICal, JCal, XCal extractors
> -------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: ANY23-390
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ANY23-390
>             Project: Apache Any23
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>    Affects Versions: 2.3
>            Reporter: Hans Brende
>            Assignee: Hans Brende
>            Priority: Major
>
> We have an hCalendar extractor (that extracts iCalendars embedded in 
> html/xhtml pages), but I don't see any actual iCalendar extractor (i.e. one 
> that parses the "text/calendar" mimetype.)
> Looking around for good Java implementations of the iCal format brought me 
> these contenders:
> 1. ical4j  
> https://github.com/ical4j/ical4j   
> https://mvnrepository.com/artifact/org.mnode.ical4j/ical4j
> 2. biweekly
> https://github.com/mangstadt/biweekly
> https://mvnrepository.com/artifact/net.sf.biweekly/biweekly
> Both projects seem to be actively developed. Although ical4j is older and 
> more widely used, I'm leaning towards Biweekly, as it supports the vCalendar, 
> iCalendar, xCal, and jCal formats, whereas ical4j currently only appears to 
> support the iCalendar format.



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