On Thu, 2003-08-07 at 17:33, John Goerzen wrote: > <language, programming> (Or "source", or rarely "source > language") The form in which a computer program is written by > the programmer. Source code is written in some formal > programming language which can be compiled automatically into > {object code} or {machine code} or executed by an > {interpreter}. > > There is no formal programming language that KJV is written in,
Sure there is. By your definition above, the "formal programming language" is defined by ANSI X3.4-1968 and consists of such instructions as "display the glyph 'A' at the next available position", etc. Generally, it is executed by an interpreter. (Sure, it's a very specialized language, but there is still source) > because the KJV is not a set of instructions[1]. Footnote missing. Sure, the KJV isn't itself. But it is when encoded in ASCII. Or PostScript. Or any other machine-readable form. > Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies > of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. > > Under the DFSG, this would fail. http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-faq.html#ModifyGPL
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