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There is no list unless someone is keeping track of them by themselves.

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There is no list unless someone is keeping track of them by themselves.

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Nvu is open source and covered under the MPL/LGPL/GPL tri-license. This means you can download, edit and redistribute the code.

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Most of KDE is available under the GNU GPL. Some programs, such as Kate / KWrite are available under the GNU LGPL.

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NO!

GPL, LGPL and MPL are complex licenses and without more knowledge this question can't be answered.

The gist of GPL, you can do with the program what you want, as long as it is you who has control over the running program, including using it in business, adding features, changing the source code, fixing bugs.

If you give a GPL licensed program to anybody else (distribution), you need to also make available the source code, and all changes you might have done to it. This includes derivative work, such as embedding it into another program. And you need tp make the program (including your changes) available under the same license.

The LGPL requires the same conditions, except it allows to distribute the code in a binary form, and linked "dynamically" as a library in derivative work, such as larger applications.

The MPL is a totally different license, with less restrictions.

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one of them has gNU and the other has gPL!!!!

The GNU is the Lesser General Public Licence or LGPL (formerly the GNU Library General Public Licence).

The main difference between them is that the LGP lets work to be linked to a non-(L)GPLed programme whether it is free software or proprietary software.

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