Hi Ryan: It is great that you can help with the IndieGogo stuff. Last time I tried there was just a question about a single script which was in the same file as the rest of the scripts, and so would prevent us from tagging it as free. But it's been a while and I don't have access to the emails I had back then atm.
You can find the list of all the files/libraries that are recognized as free directly from the source of LibreJS, although it's a good idea to make a documentation page for this: http://bzr.savannah.gnu.org/lh/librejs/dev/annotate/head:/data/script_libraries/script-libraries.json More of them are scheduled to be added for the next version 5.4.2 of LibreJS, along with new functionality (the dry-run mode suggested by John Sullivan, ...) Loic Ryan White <[email protected]> writes: > Hi Loic > Please forgive me for mailing you directly. > > > I'd like to help out with the indiegogo stuff - is there anything I could > do that could be useful? > > > I'm downloading source for LibreJS, and will be attempting to build as per > the LibreJS documentation. > > > I'll be poking around in the source, to try and understand what happens > when - your appendix B certainly sounds straightforward - but will no > doubt have a ton of questions. > > > One thing jumps to mind: Is there anywhere a matrix of javascript > libraries that are "OK" vs ones that aren't? It might serve two purposes: > to advise developers on which libraries to choose initially, and to name > and shame the library makers that aren't on board. > > > Any info much welcome. > > > Thanks > Ryan > > > > -- > > Ryan White > > > SystemicLogic > > > +27 (0) 82 875 3693 > [email protected]
