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From: | Hans Aberg |
Subject: | Re: Score parts: instrument and duration |
Date: | Wed, 17 Aug 2005 01:20:30 +0200 |
On 16 Aug 2005, at 23:54, Erik Sandberg wrote:
On Tuesday 16 August 2005 22.54, Hans Aberg wrote:But TeX was developed once, too. Its author got tired, putting the lid on further development, having the copyright. It could happen with LilyPond, too, if one arrives the point where one has the reached limits of the current setup.This is not true, both Lily and TeX is free software. Anyone can take updevelopment whenever the original developers get tired.
Yes, with TeX, that is the problem, everyone making their own successor version. It means that there is no successor that people in general are willing to shift to. The original TeX was developed by initiative from AMS (American Mathematical Society), and there is no such initiative now, holding it together.
In the context of LilyPond, the community would benefit from holding together in development.
One should note that most programming languages have a natural life cycle. First, a creative, experimenting period. Then, if the language should not become merely a curiosity, there needs to be a formalized standard, as reliability for more serious work. That is usually the path to its demise, as it cannot develop as quickly as before.
LilyPond is probably at the first stage.But one should not worry too much about it. A few years ago, there was an article about "Bison being extinct". But now, new initiatives have been made, and Bison alive and well.
Hans Aberg
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