Laurent PETIT laurent.pe...@gmail.com writes:
2013/6/5 John Gabriele jmg3...@gmail.com:
On Tuesday, June 4, 2013 4:24:49 PM UTC-4, Gary Trakhman wrote:
Just fyi, most clojure libs are published under EPL or Apache licenses, of
course the choice is up to you :-). GPL has some restrictions
On Tuesday, June 4, 2013 4:24:49 PM UTC-4, Gary Trakhman wrote:
Just fyi, most clojure libs are published under EPL or Apache licenses, of
course the choice is up to you :-). GPL has some restrictions that would
prevent the lib from being used in many projects.
from the EPL wikipedia
Hello,
2013/6/5 John Gabriele jmg3...@gmail.com:
On Tuesday, June 4, 2013 4:24:49 PM UTC-4, Gary Trakhman wrote:
Just fyi, most clojure libs are published under EPL or Apache licenses, of
course the choice is up to you :-). GPL has some restrictions that would
prevent the lib from being
Personally, I think there is too much guesswork involved in understanding
what the LGPL means re Java.
For example, from http://jtds.sourceforge.net/license.html, a Java library:
Using jTDS is considered to be dynamic linking; hence our interpretation of
the LGPL is that the use of the
On Jun 4, 2013, at 4:13 PM, Andrea Chiavazza wrote:
Alpacas is an application that displays Clojure source code with forms shown
as nested boxes, doing away with parenthesis altogether.
FWIW somewhat related ideas go back a couple of decades. Some pointers can be
found at
Right, FWIW in my previous company we disallowed LGPL libraries because of
the clause that explicitly allows reverse engineering to substitute
different versions of the library. Of course, it's unlikely that anyone
would ever do this but it would be a support nightmare if they did, so it
was just
Interesting, I think I like this presentation better, I found the explicit
boxes in the OP a little distracting. I guess this then becomes more like
Python-style significant indentation, which might be an interesting
approach too.
On 5 June 2013 12:15, Matthew Chadwick mathn...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wednesday, June 5, 2013 10:34:35 AM UTC-4, Laurent PETIT wrote:
tl;dr: when should I prefer LGPL over EPL for a Clojure lib ?
Have a look at the brief summary at
http://docs.python-guide.org/en/latest/writing/license.html . If you care
more about item #2 on that 2-item list, then you
Alpacas is an application that displays Clojure source code with forms
shown as nested boxes, doing away with parenthesis altogether.
Run it with lein run and it will display its own source code.
There is partial support to navigate the source code by moving a cursor
with the left and right
Idea seems great but no screenshots? Too bad for a visual tool
On Tue, Jun 4, 2013 at 10:13 PM, Andrea Chiavazza ndrch...@gmail.comwrote:
Alpacas is an application that displays Clojure source code with forms
shown as nested boxes, doing away with parenthesis altogether.
Run it with lein run
Just fyi, most clojure libs are published under EPL or Apache licenses, of
course the choice is up to you :-). GPL has some restrictions that would
prevent the lib from being used in many projects.
from the EPL wikipedia page: 'The EPL 1.0 is not
Thanks for letting me know, I was not aware of this issue.
Google code seems to let you just switch the license, so I switched it to
EPL 1.0.
On Tuesday, 4 June 2013 21:24:49 UTC+1, Gary Trakhman wrote:
Just fyi, most clojure libs are published under EPL or Apache licenses, of
course the
Screenshot added
On Tuesday, 4 June 2013 21:14:56 UTC+1, Denis Labaye wrote:
Idea seems great but no screenshots? Too bad for a visual tool
On Tue, Jun 4, 2013 at 10:13 PM, Andrea Chiavazza
ndrc...@gmail.comjavascript:
wrote:
Alpacas is an application that displays Clojure source code
This looks like it might be helpful, especially for beginners. I taught
Racket in a High School course last year, and I can think of cases where
such a diagram could have helped some students.
On Tuesday, June 4, 2013 3:58:52 PM UTC-5, Andrea Chiavazza wrote:
Screenshot added
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You
hehe looks similar to something I've been writing:
http://celeriac.net/ioio/public/
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