Thanks!  ESLint looks interesting.  I'm curious to see what it
says about the Horizon source.  I'll keep it in mind for future
personal projects and the like.

Best Regards,
Solly Ross

----- Original Message -----
> From: "Martin Geisler" <mar...@geisler.net>
> To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)" 
> <openstack-dev@lists.openstack.org>
> Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 3:20:56 AM
> Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [Horizon] Licensing issue with using JSHint in   
> build
> 
> Solly Ross <sr...@redhat.com> writes:
> 
> Hi,
> 
> I recently began using using ESLint for all my JavaScript linting:
> 
>   http://eslint.org/
> 
> It has nice documentation, a normal license, and you can easily write
> new rules for it.
> 
> > P.S. Here's hoping that the JSHint devs eventually find a way to
> > remove that line from the file -- according to
> > https://github.com/jshint/jshint/issues/1234, not much of the original
> > remains.
> 
> I don't think it matters how much of the original code remains -- what
> matters is that any rewrite is a derived work. Otherwise Debian and
> others could have made the license pure MIT long ago.
> 
> --
> Martin Geisler
> 
> http://google.com/+MartinGeisler
> 
> _______________________________________________
> OpenStack-dev mailing list
> OpenStack-dev@lists.openstack.org
> http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev
> 

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