Miscellaneous > Programming & Networking

vector graphics help

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Orethrius:

--- Quote from: piratePenguin ---Don't tell me Debian still uses it!?
--- End quote ---

 Ya know, not saying that he did, but he could've forked a GPLed version for his own needs.  ;)

worker201:

--- Quote from: Orethrius ---Ya know, not saying that he did, but he could've forked a GPLed version for his own needs.  ;)
--- End quote ---
:lmao:
Somehow, I doubt it.

solemnwarning:

--- Quote from: piratePenguin ---Don't tell me Debian still uses it!?
--- End quote ---


Yes, Debian still uses it! :D

Although its dropped in the current testing release thats running on my laptop so I had to hack the stable package to work with the packages under testing.

piratePenguin:

--- Quote from: worker201 ---However, my understanding is that the Linux community as a whole is against this kind of licensing, no matter how liberal it is.
--- End quote ---

PS is supported by ALOT of free software (I'd nearly say say that generally all applicable free software supports the format). There's the huge amount of software I've already mentioned, and I just noticed evince, GNOME's document viewer can read PS documents (as well as PDFs and DjVu documents).

KDE has kghostview to view PS documents.

So I dunno what makes you think "the Linux community as a whole is against this kind of licensing"...

There just seems to be inkscape that's missing. You could learn C++ and fix that..

edit: http://inkscape.org/doc/devdocs.php

H_TeXMeX_H:
I know some C++ (about 3 credit hours worth ...), enough for making simple games, math programs, small utilities, but probably not enough for doing something like this .... and you need lots of time. I mean usually there is a development team ... not a one man team :)

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