On Wed, 09 Jun 2004 09:53:18 -0700 Josh Triplett wrote: > >>One other issue: does "and the nroff source is included" mean that > >>if I want to hand someone a printed copy of a manual page, I have to > >>either print the nroff source or supply it on an attached disk? > >>This seems onerous for physical distribution. > > > > This is what happens if you apply the GPL to documentation, and it > > seems to be considered acceptable. > > The GPL has an option for just providing an offer to provide source on > request.
Moreover, the GPL requires that *source code* be accompanied or offered.
This POSIX license requires that *nroff source* be included.
What if I created a derivative work by
step 0) converting it from nroff to some other typesetting language
(e.g. DocBook XML, LaTeX, XHTML, ...)
step 1) then applying lots of modifications to it
?
In that case, I'd say the new source code is in the other language (say,
DocBook): with the GPL I'd have to accompany or offer the new source
code in order to distribute my derivative work.
But what should I do in order to distribute my derivative work *and* to
comply with the POSIX license?
No nroff source would exist for my derivative work...
Such a derivative work would be undistributable, correct me if I'm
wrong.
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