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  2. Apache Groovy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_Groovy

    Groovy 1.0 was released on January 2, 2007, and Groovy 2.0 in July, 2012. Since version 2, Groovy can be compiled statically, offering type inference and performance near that of Java. [4] [5] Groovy 2.4 was the last major release under Pivotal Software's sponsorship which ended in March 2015. [6]

  3. Griffon (framework) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Griffon_(framework)

    Griffon is an open source rich client platform framework which uses the Java, Apache Groovy, and/or Kotlin programming languages. Griffon is intended to be a high-productivity framework by rewarding use of the Model-View-Controller paradigm, providing a stand-alone development environment and hiding much of the configuration detail from the developer.

  4. GroovyLab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GroovyLab

    The main scripting engine of GroovyLab is GroovySci, an extension of Groovy. Additionally, the interpreted Groovy Scripts (similar to MATLAB ) and dynamic linking to Java class code are supported. The GroovyLab environment provides a MATLAB/Scilab scientific computing platform that is supported by scripting engines implemented in the Java language.

  5. Gradle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gradle

    Gradle is a build automation tool for multi-language software development. It manages tasks like compilation, packaging, testing, deployment, and publishing. Supported languages include Java (as well as JDK-based languages Kotlin, Groovy, Scala), C/C++, and JavaScript. [2]

  6. Selenium (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selenium_(software)

    It provides a playback tool for authoring functional tests across most modern web browsers, without the need to learn a test scripting language (Selenium IDE). [4] It also provides a test domain-specific language (Selenese) to write tests in a number of popular programming languages, including JavaScript ( Node.js ), C# , Groovy , Java , Perl ...

  7. Pipeline (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pipeline_(software)

    In software engineering, a pipeline consists of a chain of processing elements (processes, threads, coroutines, functions, etc.), arranged so that the output of each element is the input of the next. The concept is analogous to a physical pipeline .

  8. Grails (framework) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grails_(framework)

    Grails is an open source web application framework that uses the Apache Groovy [2]: 757, §18 programming language (which is in turn based on the Java platform).It is intended to be a high-productivity framework by following the "coding by convention" paradigm, providing a stand-alone development environment and hiding much of the configuration detail from the developer.

  9. sbt (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SBT_(software)

    sbt (originally simple build tool, nowadays stands for nothing [4]) is an open-source build tool which can build Java, Scala, and Kotlin projects.It aims to streamline the procedure of constructing, compiling, testing, and packaging applications, libraries, and frameworks.