Abstract
Once you have a working application, the next step is to decide how and where to distribute it. You might be writing it for yourself, but most likely you will have a wider audience and have a set schedule for releasing it. There are a number of decisions to be made and tasks to be performed before you can do that, however. This process consists primarily of packaging and distribution, but it begins with licensing.
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Notes
- 1.
See GNU Operating System, “GNU General Public License,” http://propython.com/gpl .
- 2.
See Open Source Initiative, “Licenses by Name,” http://propython.com/osi-licenses .
- 3.
See GNU Operating System, “Various Licenses and Comments about Them,” http://propython.com/fsf-licenses .
- 4.
See Distributing Python Modules, “2. Writing the Setup Script,” http://propython.com/distutils-setup .
- 5.
See Cygwin, http://propython.com/cygwin .
- 6.
See Python Package Index (PyPl), http://propython.com/pypi .
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© 2019 J. Burton Browning and Marty Alchin
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Browning, J.B., Alchin, M. (2019). Distribution. In: Pro Python 3. Apress, Berkeley, CA. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4842-4385-5_10
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4842-4385-5_10
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