Someone else pointed out that I haven't been clear enough on this. The answer is simple: party on. Free for personal and commercial use.richie wrote:How do you plan to allow for users that want to use this commercially?
A more detailed answer:
Use of the G-Code programs this spits out carries no restrictions at all. You don't even have to credit me. In this sense MonkeyCAM is analogous to a compiler. People build large, amazingly profitable businesses all the time using C++ compilers but they don't pay anything (modulo a one-time purchase in _some_ cases) to the maker of the compiler, or necessarily credit them. Of course, the guys who build gcc love a little credit now and then.
Use of the source code for MonkeyCAM is subject to the license included at the github repo, and other software developers will understand what that entails in depth. The high-level answer is that it's free to use, with minor restrictions around copyrights and patents, even if you want to build and then sell software which incorporates it.