Dierk told me the source code from Groovy in Action 2nd edition is actually Apache licensed, and can be found here on Github: https://github.com/Dierk/GroovyInAction
So you can reuse it for the new parser. Let's be sure to keep the attribution, to remember where this code is coming from. Guillaume On Mon, Mar 21, 2016 at 5:05 PM, daniel_sun <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi List, > > Jesper and I are tring to implement Groovy parser via antlr4. Some > typical test cases are required to check the compatibility between the > antlr2 parser and the antlr4 parser. As we all know, Groovy in Action 2nd > Edition is the most definitive book for Groovy and contain many sample > codes. We wonder whether the sample codes conform to APL v2 ? > > ps: the project url is https://github.com/jespersm/groovy/tree/antlr4 > > Cheers, > Daniel.Sun > > > > > > -- > View this message in context: > http://groovy.329449.n5.nabble.com/About-the-license-of-the-sample-codes-from-Groovy-in-Action-2nd-Edition-tp5732026.html > Sent from the Groovy Dev mailing list archive at Nabble.com. > -- Guillaume Laforge Apache Groovy committer & PMC Vice-President Product Ninja & Advocate at Restlet <http://restlet.com> Blog: http://glaforge.appspot.com/ Social: @glaforge <http://twitter.com/glaforge> / Google+ <https://plus.google.com/u/0/114130972232398734985/posts>
