Assuming that the code is eligible for copyright protection, and assuming that the author had the right to license it under CC BY-SA 3.0 (so it would be case {3}):
You have to license your application under CC BY-SA 3.0, too, if you distribute the application.
(It doesn’t matter whether or not you make changes to the code. It doesn’t matter that the application is much larger.)
Examples that count as distribution:
- You offer the application for download, on CDs, etc. (no matter if as binary or source code, no matter if gratis or for sale).
- You offer hardware that comes pre-installed with the application.
- You install the application on computers of the company’s customers.
Examples that don’t count as distribution:
- You use the application only internally in the company.
- You install the application on your company’s public server, but users never get the binary nor the source code when interacting with the application on the server (e.g., it’s not client-side JavaScript).
What to do when you can’t (or don’t want to) license it accordingly?
To learn from the code posted in an answer well enough to be able to recreate the idea without having to look back at the posted code (since to my understanding the under lying idea can't be copyrighted)?
Yes, that would be possible. Copyrighted/licensed is the specific expression, not the idea. See also: clean room design.
Alternatives:
Ask the author for permission to use the code under different terms (e.g., under a different license). Some authors might even give everyone such a permission in their user profile. See also: multi-licensing.
Structure your application in such a way that you have a CC-BY-SA-licensed part and a separate proprietary part. Whether this is allowed depends on how these parts "communicate" (however, as CC BY-SA was not intended for software, this is not clearly defined).
If
Then
Else
clause be protected, and thus be an issue in your code? If you use parts of it you might as well say that you came up with it yourself. No-one that can verify that, unless you blatantly copy paste larger pieces of code. Also see for example this post: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/267022/…