Calculator Community > Lua

A message to Nspire BASIC/Lua programmers

<< < (3/3)

Ashbad:
Well, that technically can be considered a license, depending on what it applies to ;) with many calculator games it's fine (such as Axe or BASIC games).  I think it's just a bit unthoughtful though if someone writes something that includes either source or extreme documentation, in a language like assembly, Lua, C, or even non-calc projects -- when there's a good chance your code will be stolen for later use.  A disclaimer can work just fine, but for the paranoid like me the GPL v3 does wonders at protecting your work with some actual backing in court ;)

DJ Omnimaga:
I wonder if they would want to deal with calculator games in court, though O.O

calc84maniac:
I plan to release source code with TI-Boy, but I don't expect people to understand it haha

pianoman:

--- Quote from: DJ_O on June 12, 2011, 09:25:55 pm ---I wonder if they would want to deal with calculator games in court, though O.O

--- End quote ---
Knowing the US legal system, maybe :P

Jonius7:
This reminds me definitely. If you're making an 'official-like' release on ticalc.org there should definitely be a readme. Unfortunately there are just so many files out there with single document files in .zips, and some don't even have instructions within the game!

I myself am kinda guilty in not posting a full 'how-to-play' readme, just an informational readme. :D

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[*] Previous page

Go to full version