3f5a4bd900
This pull request comes without tetsts because there is no clean way to set the system timezone in a Java unit test: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/23466218/setting-timezone-for-maven-unit-tests-on-java-8 The problem came from the fact that we were interpreting all dates with the current zone *offset*, which varies during the year depending on DST, meaning that during the winter we would interpret summer dates in a winter timezone, which does not make sense. This changes the date conversion mechanism to only rely on the current zone, making sure the correct offset is used depending on the value of the converted date. |
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.github | ||
benchmark | ||
conf | ||
docs | ||
extensions | ||
graphics | ||
IDEs/eclipse | ||
licenses | ||
main | ||
packaging | ||
server | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
appveyor.yml | ||
AUTHORS.md | ||
CHANGES.txt | ||
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
GOVERNANCE.md | ||
lgtm.yml | ||
LICENSE.txt | ||
pom.xml | ||
README.md | ||
refine | ||
refine.bat | ||
refine.ini | ||
SECURITY.md | ||
settings.xml | ||
start.sh | ||
stop.sh | ||
WeLoveOurBackers.md |
OpenRefine
OpenRefine is a Java-based power tool that allows you to load data, understand it, clean it up, reconcile it, and augment it with data coming from the web. All from a web browser and the comfort and privacy of your own computer.
Download
Run from source
If you have cloned this repository to your computer, you can run OpenRefine with:
./refine
on Mac OS and Linuxrefine.bat
on Windows
This requires JDK 8 and Apache Maven.
Documentation and Videos
Contributing to the project
Contact us
Licensing and legal issues
OpenRefine is open source software and is licensed under the BSD license
located in the LICENSE.txt. See the folder licenses
for information on open source
libraries that OpenRefine depends on.
Credits
This software was created by Metaweb Technologies, Inc. and originally written and conceived by David Huynh dfhuynh@google.com. Metaweb Technologies, Inc. was acquired by Google, Inc. in July 2010 and the product was renamed Google Refine. In October 2012, it was renamed OpenRefine as it transitioned to a community-supported product.
See AUTHORS.md for the list of OpenRefine contributors and CONTRIBUTING.md for instructions on how to contribute yourself.