Groovy

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'''Groovy''' (or '''Apache Groovy''') is not about '60s hippies or [[Gramophone record|vinyl records]], but is an open source programming language from the Apache Foundation that compiles to [[Java]] bytecode. It inherits most of its syntax from Java, but has a few additions, and some quirky terminology of its own; for instance, an interpolated string is called a "GString". [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-xhJcQEfD5s Feelin' groovy!]
 
'''Groovy''' (or '''Apache Groovy''') is not about '60s hippies or [[Gramophone record|vinyl records]], but is an open source programming language from the Apache Foundation that compiles to [[Java]] bytecode. It inherits most of its syntax from Java, but has a few additions, and some quirky terminology of its own; for instance, an interpolated string is called a "GString". [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-xhJcQEfD5s Feelin' groovy!]
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The [[Jenkinsfile]], used by the Jenkins system for automated building, testing, and deployment of software, has a syntax that is a variant of Groovy, Groovy Domain-Specific Language.
  
 
== Links ==
 
== Links ==

Latest revision as of 13:35, 14 August 2022

File Format
Name Groovy
Ontology
Extension(s) .groovy
Wikidata ID Q504453
Released 2003

Groovy (or Apache Groovy) is not about '60s hippies or vinyl records, but is an open source programming language from the Apache Foundation that compiles to Java bytecode. It inherits most of its syntax from Java, but has a few additions, and some quirky terminology of its own; for instance, an interpolated string is called a "GString". Feelin' groovy!

The Jenkinsfile, used by the Jenkins system for automated building, testing, and deployment of software, has a syntax that is a variant of Groovy, Groovy Domain-Specific Language.

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