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The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate
parts of the General Public License. Of course, your program's commands
might be different; for a GUI interface, you would use an "about box".
You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or school,
if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary.
For more information on this, and how to apply and follow the GNU GPL, see
<http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
The GNU General Public License does not permit incorporating your program
into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you
may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with
the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General
Public License instead of this License. But first, please read
<http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html>.
Bison Exception
As a special exception, you may create a larger work that contains part or all of the Bison parser skeleton
and distribute that work under terms of your choice, so long as that work isn't itself a parser generator
using the skeleton or a modified version thereof as a parser skeleton. Alternatively, if you modify or
redistribute the parser skeleton itself, you may (at your option) remove this special exception, which will
cause the skeleton and the resulting Bison output files to be licensed under the GNU General Public
License without this special exception.
This special exception was added by the Free Software Foundation in version 2.2 of Bison.
GPL-3.0+-with-GCC-exception
GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
Version 3, 29 June 2007
Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/>
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
Preamble
The GNU General Public License is a free, copyleft license for