Wow, what a thread!

Thank Patrick, Cody and Ian, the sixrev link is really helpful. I will
try to dig in Open Flash Chart as it looks pretty good and is LGPL. JSON
is pretty easy to deal with.

One more question, if I wanted to release my software under a 2-clause
BSD-like license like this one: http://nginx.net/LICENSE - can I mix GPL
/LGPL software with it? Or if they are not compatible, can I still
release my software under BSD license, so that the GPL part is released
under GPL, and my part is under BSD?

- Huan.


Ian Monroe wrote:
> On Sat, Jun 27, 2009 at 8:40 AM, Huan Truong<[email protected]> wrote:
>> Hi all,
>>
>> Hope that you're having a great summer.
>>
>> This summer I'm working on a open-source project that has to deal with a
>> bunch of data from a log file stored in SQLite format. it's some sort of
>> data like what in an Apache log file - a bunch of events with the event
>> type, event source and time-stamp. I want to generate some sort of
>> flexible charts and reports like what we can do in Google Analytics.
>>
>> I think reinventing the wheel might not be the smartest choice so if
>> anyone can give me a hint of which kind of framework I can rely on to
>> accelerate my requirements is highly appreciated. I prefer something
>> written in PHP for easier integration but it doesn't really matter, as
>> long as it's scriptable/programmable.
> 
> If its for a webpage, there are some impressive JavaScript libraries
> to render piecharts, graphs etc. I don't remember their names off the
> top of my head, but they're not hard to find if you know to look for
> them.
> 
>> Thanks in advance,
>> - Huan T.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> By the way, I had a chance to play with Qt4 this summer and it is
>> definitely a feature-complete and powerful framework to rely on. Writing
>> an application that compiles and runs natively on Windows, Linux and Mac
>> is just a click away. QtCreator is very solid and I find myself in love
>> with it (except for the Ctrl+click feature, there were so many times I
>> was forced to jump to another document while everything I was trying to
>> do is copy and paste.)
> 
> Qt4 is great stuff. :) If you ever want a project to work on, KDE is
> quite open to new developers. Just find something to work on.
> 
> The still unreleased KDevelop4 is a really impressive IDE for C++
> development, mainly because it has very advanced C++ semantic parsing
> (better then QtCreator's). If you ever worked with a Java IDE like
> Eclipse you know how useful that sort of thing is since it alerts you
> to compile-time errors, and allows you do to some advanced
> refactoring. KDevelop4 still isn't very stable though, some weeks are
> better then others. They really need a feature freeze. :)
> 
> Ian
> 
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