[Sorry for my last mail- I really did type comments, I just have no idea where they went...] On Tue, 12 Oct 1999 22:11:00 PDT, doctor jest wrote: >On Tue, 12 Oct 1999, Russell Steinthal wrote: > >> Well, I see three ways of proceeding, at this point: > >take a look at http://www.softwarestudio.org/libical/ before >you start writing a new ical library .. ical is a very >complicated data format, and there is a lot of domain >knowledge that's gone into the design of that library. not >that its necessarily the be-all and end-all, but its >definitely at least a starting point. Interesting. Unfortunately, there may be licensing issues- libical is licensed under the Mozilla Public License, and while I haven't had a chance to review the actual terms of the license in detail, I am told by people on #gnome that the MPL and GPL are incompatible, which would rule out using the code in gnome-pim. (Unless, apparently, one uses a Bonobo component, but I'm not sure that's applicable to a library). In any case, we can certainly learn from its design and code if we end up having to write our own iCalendar library. -Russell -- Russell Steinthal Columbia Law School, Class of 2002 <rms39@columbia.edu> Columbia College, Class of 1999 <steintr@nj.org> UNIX System Administrator, nj.org
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