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- The authors of this software are Christopher W. Fraser and
- David R. Hanson.
- Copyright (c) 1991,1992,1993,1994,1995,1996,1997,1998 by AT&T,
- Christopher W. Fraser, and David R. Hanson. All Rights Reserved.
- Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any
- purpose, subject to the provisions described below, without fee is
- hereby granted, provided that this entire notice is included in all
- copies of any software that is or includes a copy or modification of
- this software and in all copies of the supporting documentation for
- such software.
- THIS SOFTWARE IS BEING PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
- WARRANTY. IN PARTICULAR, NEITHER THE AUTHORS NOR AT&T MAKE ANY
- REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OF ANY KIND CONCERNING THE MERCHANTABILITY
- OF THIS SOFTWARE OR ITS FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
- lcc is not public-domain software, shareware, and it is not protected
- by a `copyleft' agreement, like the code from the Free Software
- Foundation.
- lcc is available free for your personal research and instructional use
- under the `fair use' provisions of the copyright law. You may, however,
- redistribute lcc in whole or in part provided you acknowledge its
- source and include this CPYRIGHT file. You may, for example, include
- the distribution in a CDROM of free software, provided you charge only
- for the media, or mirror the distribution files at your site.
- You may not sell lcc or any product derived from it in which it is a
- significant part of the value of the product. Using the lcc front end
- to build a C syntax checker is an example of this kind of product.
- You may use parts of lcc in products as long as you charge for only
- those components that are entirely your own and you acknowledge the use
- of lcc clearly in all product documentation and distribution media. You
- must state clearly that your product uses or is based on parts of lcc
- and that lcc is available free of charge. You must also request that
- bug reports on your product be reported to you. Using the lcc front
- end to build a C compiler for the Motorola 88000 chip and charging for
- and distributing only the 88000 code generator is an example of this
- kind of product.
- Using parts of lcc in other products is more problematic. For example,
- using parts of lcc in a C++ compiler could save substantial time and
- effort and therefore contribute significantly to the profitability of
- the product. This kind of use, or any use where others stand to make a
- profit from what is primarily our work, requires a license agreement
- with Addison-Wesley. Per-copy and unlimited use licenses are
- available; for more information, contact
- J. Carter Shanklin
- Addison Wesley Longman, Inc.
- 2725 Sand Hill Rd.
- Menlo Park, CA 94025
- 650/854-0300 x2478 FAX: 650/614-2930 jcs@awl.com
- -----
- Chris Fraser / cwfraser@microsoft.com
- David Hanson / drh@microsoft.com
- $Revision: 145 $ $Date: 2001-10-17 16:53:10 -0500 (Wed, 17 Oct 2001) $
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