Dear Elie, It has no license as I don't bother with such things. The code is completely free to do whatever you want with it. It will be staying on the github for as long as that server is running, so you can pull it into contrib/ if you want. You can treat it as public domain or put it under the 'Res Delicta' license. GPL is fine too. You can fork the project and submit a pull request if you have a license file that would work with gregorio.
I think many people that use gregorio already have some kind of LaTeX experience, and emacs is used heavily for this purpose, so I think gregorio-mode will be useful for quite a few people. With ghostscript and imagemagick you can display pdf and images in Emacs. Using x-widgets you can even embed a webbrowser, which is useful for looking at the gregorio documentation while transcribing : http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/EmacsXWidgets I'm traveling at the moment, so the added features to gregorio-mode will be available only on Monday. Z Bogiem, JJ + On Jun 14, 2013, at 11:14 AM, Élie Roux <[email protected]> wrote: > Dear Brother, > >> For those who use Emacs, or for anyone who is looking for an editor >> that can syntax color gregorio .gabc files, I have written an Emacs >> major-mode for gregorio. > > Thank you very much for your work, it seems really efficient and > well-designed! > >> Emacs is a very popular editor and very >> extensible, so I recommend it highly for writing gabc scores. Emacs >> does require a little bit of learning to really master it, but the >> time invested really does pay dividends, as I hope this major-mode >> for .gabc will show. > > For sure Emacs is very good and extremely powerful! I'm not sure all users of > Gregorio are ready to dig into it though... > >> As you can see, Emacs provides a complete writing system for gregorio >> with this major mode. You can even view the resulting .pdf in Emacs >> in a parallel window. There are also numerous Emacs extensions for >> editing LaTex, which makes Emacs ideal for gregorio. > > I have to say I'm impressed by the fact that you can see the pdf in Emacs! > > Just a question: which license is your script distributed under? Would you > choose a GPLv3-compatible license (like BSD, GPLv2, etc.)? I was thinking > about distributing it in the contrib/ folder with Gregorio, do you think it's > a good idea? > > Thank you, > -- > Elie > _______________________________________________ Gregorio-users mailing list [email protected] https://mail.gna.org/listinfo/gregorio-users

