I have been working on richedit a little also, and am quite keen to get the ball rolling by having some richedit 2.0 code in winehq that others can help work on it. I'm quite interested to see the source for this.
Whether you show us or not, the copyright for the source still belongs to you. If you choose to license it under LGPL, then you can still release it under a different license later, so long as you are the sole author.
I think you'll find that the development proceeds much quicker if you release your source, and get it integrated into the Wine tree sooner rather than later. People will submit patches fixing your code, and new features.
When you do release your "completed" riched20 code, LGPL patches will still be submitted against it, and you'll experience the same licensing problems if you wish to incorporate other people's code.
Frankly speaking, people promising to release their source code "at a later date" is an impedement to development, because nobody is motivated to work on the promised feature in the mean time.
Please consider "release early, release often", so we can work together on this :)
Mike
Krzysztof Foltman wrote:
Just for the record, I'm still trying to develop a "proper" RichEdit control. I've written from scratch with RichEdit compatibility in mind, so I don't expect any copyright or suitability problems. At least, unless I screw something up or I'm less smart than I think.
If someone isn't afraid of running closed-source .exe from barely known developer (or can run it in a controlled environment), you can find the latest binary at:
I'm not releasing the source yet, because I don't think it's hackable, until at least its architecture is complete. What's more, I'm planning to license a heavily modified derived product comercially to some company (a rich text viewer/editor tailored for a specific application), so any copyright-related problems are undesirable.
What IS done:
- basic text wrapping with support for proportional fonts and character
formatting, no major known bugs (the only supported attribute is Bold, but the rest will be relatively easy to add)
- simple editing (typing text, backspace, delete, no overwrite mode yet)
- a very incomplete implementation of Shift-arrow selection (done in a
few hours yesterday :-) ), mouse operations don't support selection yet
- per-paragraph alignment
- pitiful low-level style management
- bold attribute
- some basic optimizations (avoiding rewrapping unmodified paragraphs
unless editor window is resized)
- uses UNICODE internally (not necessarily a good thing)
What isn't done:
- RichEdit API (which is a mess; I'm taking care of it in order to
ensure compatibility wrt how editing functions work, however, basic editing functionality is the number one priority, as it's more difficult to achieve)
- RTF interface
- Undo
- Clipboard
- tabs
- bulleted lists
- setting paragraph attributes (margins are implemented internally but
can't be changed with current interface, setting alignment by Ctrl+L/E/R works)
- all RichEdit f3 functionality
- MBCS support (and it would be very hard to add)
- BiDi and CTL support (ditto)
- everything not mentioned in the first list
Krzysztof