Submit portable freeware that you find here. It helps if you include information like description, extraction instruction, Unicode support, whether it writes to the registry, and so on.
WinCompose is an AutoHotKey keyboard utility designed to allow an user to insert exotic characters with minimal effort. Unfortunately, it is not yet natively portable as it saves its 'settings.ini' to the user's '%APPDATA%\WinCompose\' folder, a shortcoming easily solvable with a custom launcher.
[WinCompose] allows to easily write special characters [...] using short and often very intuitive key combinations. [...] WinCompose supports the standard Compose file format. It provides more than 1600 compose rules from the Xorg project and the dotXCompose project. You can add custom rules by creating a file named .XCompose or .XCompose.txt in your %USERPROFILE% directory.
Hi — WinCompose author here. I was not familiar with portable applications, but I’m willing to do the necessary changes. The next version (probably 0.6.8) will provide a portable version that does not touch %AppData% if not installed.
samhocevar wrote:Hi — WinCompose author here. I was not familiar with portable applications, but I’m willing to do the necessary changes. The next version (probably 0.6. will provide a portable version that does not touch %AppData% if not installed.
Thanks for stopping by... a portable version would be awesome. Thank you.
It's essentially the Anti-License License. I get that devs don't want to muck about this sort of thing but I've got to point out that there's functionally very little difference between the WTFPL and BSD (or MIT for that matter). I'd generally recommend sticking with BSD to avoid confusion. That said, I think selecting this license is itself sort of a protest against how tedious license stuff can get so maybe it'll take off and won't cause other devs to second guess it's usage.
It's essentially the Anti-License License. I get that devs don't want to muck about this sort of thing but I've got to point out that there's functionally very little difference between the WTFPL and BSD (or MIT for that matter). I'd generally recommend sticking with BSD to avoid confusion. That said, I think selecting this license is itself sort of a protest against how tedious license stuff can get so maybe it'll take off and won't cause other devs to second guess it's usage.
I don't know if you noticed, but Sam Hocevar is the author of both WinCompose and WTFPL...
SYSTEM wrote:I don't know if you noticed, but Sam Hocevar is the author of both WinCompose and WTFPL...
Hehe ... no, I didn't but my point still holds but that actually makes it LESS appealing due to it's obscurity. Still if you're going to start a new license (or in this case anti-license) you've gotta start somewhere.
I'd love to see a judge reading this out loud in a proper court setting