Dear Father,

It has no license as I don't bother with such things. The code is
completely free to do whatever you want with it. It will be staying
on the github for as long as that server is running, so you can pull
 it into contrib/ if you want. You can treat it as public domain or
put it under the 'Res Delicta' license. GPL is fine too. You can fork
the project and submit a pull request if you have a license file that
would work with gregorio.

I understand what you mean. In fact I tend to use more and more the
Creative Common CC0 license, which is what is closest to public domain,
but still a valid license. (in French law, public domain is not a valid license, while CC0 is) See http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ Would this license fit?

I think many people that use gregorio already have some kind of LaTeX
experience, and emacs is used heavily for this purpose, so I think
gregorio-mode will be useful for quite a few people.

For sure, Emacs is terribly powerful, I'm very happy to see gregorio integrated in it!

With ghostscript and imagemagick you can display pdf and images in
Emacs. Using x-widgets you can even embed a webbrowser, which is
useful for looking at the gregorio documentation while transcribing
:

http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/EmacsXWidgets

I'm traveling at the moment, so the added features to gregorio-mode
will be available only on Monday.

Ok. I'm planning to make the 2.3 release of Gregorio beginning of next week so it's perfect!

Thank you,
--
Elie

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