On 08/26/2017 10:04 AM, Loretta L wrote: > Hi, > Have you got my email?
Hi Loretta, your message was received in the mailing list: https://tug.org/pipermail/tex-hyphen/2017-August/001617.html. (BTW, aren’t you subscribed to it?) > 2017-08-20 19:37 GMT+10:00 Loretta L wrote: > > I am Loretta. I am developing my APP now. I am writing to ask could > you tell me the license of EN > <http://tug.org/svn/texhyphen/trunk/collaboration/repository/hyphenator/en_us.js> > and FR > <http://tug.org/svn/texhyphen/trunk/collaboration/repository/hyphenator/fr.js> > hyphenators on > your website? The standard warnings: I’m not a lawyer and this isn’t legal advice. If you need it, please hire a lawyer. The English hyphenation patterns (the original ones from TeX) should be under the same license as TeX itself. The French hyphenation patterns seem to be under a MIT license (https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT). > May I use them in my APP? As long as you comply with the licenses’ terms. I think (but you have to check it before doing anything) that including the copyright notice and the permission text would be fine. Just in case it helps, Pablo -- http://www.ousia.tk
