Hi Tuukaa! > TTT: This part is difficult to generally answer, as it depends how these are > used and > what these are used for. Intention of the mixing restriction is to prevent > cases where > someone (e.g. a company) uses the open-source version of Qt in cases where > they should > use commercial version. Typical example of this is a case where only part of > the > developers using Qt together would have a commercial license. We are aware of > the fact > that the way how it is written is such that it might extend further than the > primary > intention. This is a topic that we do not currently have a proper solution > for.
Then you should find a solution. This puts customers / developers / users in the situation that they depend on the goodwill of a for-profit corporation. However, there is no good will in a profit-making business. It must be perfectly clear that development projects are not affected by the fundamental use of third-party Qt-based applications. I probably will not use Qt for new projects and I cannot recommend it (but I have to add that this decision is also driven by the fact that the technical priorities in the Qt project have not been in line with my priorities for a few years) . -- Best Regards, Bernhard Lindner _______________________________________________ Interest mailing list Interest@qt-project.org https://lists.qt-project.org/listinfo/interest