Cameron Laird wrote: > In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > . > . > . > >Well, this may be the CPython way of open source but I don't know if > >that is "Open source" in general. Another way is that if someone(or > >group) don't like the current state of a project, they fork. I don't > >know if that is possible in the context of python, and programming > >language in general. Can it still be called python ? > . > . > . > While I don't understand the question, it might be pertinent to > observe that, among open-source development projects, Python is > unusual for the *large* number of "forks" or alternative imple- > mentations it has supported through the years <URL: > http://phaseit.net/claird/comp.lang.python/python_varieties.html >. The question is, can anyone just fork a new one using the python name, as part of the project, without the permission from the foundation ? Say for example, anyone want to implement java needs permission from Sun(or is it javasoft), if I rememeber correctly. Therefore, the only way to make change to java the language is to convince Sun, very similar to the model of Python. But many open source project is not using this model.
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