Hello, thank you very much for your help. Sorry, I do not speak very good English.
I'm using GWT 2.6 with Netbeans on GNU / Linux.
Just try what you say, GWT in Eclipse 2.7 because with Netbeans had trouble compiling it seems that GWT 2.7 is not supported in Netbeans.
The test was successful. LibreJs run JavaScript left with headers with GPL licenses. I think the best way is to migrate to Eclipse and I think it will take a while to work, but that finally, will be the most appropriate.
Thank You
Regards
El martes, 31 de marzo de 2015, 13:57:56 (UTC-3), Thomas Broyer escribió:
-- I'm using GWT 2.6 with Netbeans on GNU / Linux.
Just try what you say, GWT in Eclipse 2.7 because with Netbeans had trouble compiling it seems that GWT 2.7 is not supported in Netbeans.
The test was successful. LibreJs run JavaScript left with headers with GPL licenses. I think the best way is to migrate to Eclipse and I think it will take a while to work, but that finally, will be the most appropriate.
Thank You
Regards
El martes, 31 de marzo de 2015, 13:57:56 (UTC-3), Thomas Broyer escribió:
On Tuesday, March 31, 2015 at 4:34:24 PM UTC+2, Diego Ariel Capeletti wrote:
Hello, a few months ago I'm developing a GWT application I intend to publish it as Free Software License (AGPL), both written in Java source files, as the resulting code HTML, CSS and JavaScript that is generated by GWT. I believe that there should be no legal problems with licensing, Do you guys think?I am not a lawyer but JavaScript produced by GWT is a mix of you own code (under your own license) and GWT code (under Apache v2), so it's GPL-compatible. The JS code that comes from GWT (gwt-dev and gwt-user) has no third-party dependencies (AFAIK).Today I'm having problems with LibreJs since JavasScript files fail the test it imposes. A test passed, is because it has licensed headers JavaScript files, but there is another problem that you can not find solution.
In the attached picture, I show LibreJs reporting. The head of the JavaScript license is present, but there is another aspect that LibreJs donot do not like and it is. Any website written with GWT, for easier it always is blocked by LibreJs. I welcome your comments.
What is the matter?Which version of GWT are you using? Are you using the "std" linker (aka IframeLinker) or have you switched to the "xsiframe" linker? (GWT 2.7 uses xsiframe by default)Do you have the old-ish __gwt_historyFrame iframe in your HTML page?Those are the only two reasons I can see for having a src="''".Anyway, a src="''" should be GPL-compatible ;-)
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Google Web Toolkit" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to google-web-toolkit+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to google-web-toolkit@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/google-web-toolkit.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
No comments:
Post a Comment