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  2. Gradle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gradle

    Gradle builds on the concepts of Apache Ant and Apache Maven, and introduces a Groovy- and Kotlin-based domain-specific language contrasted with the XML-based project configuration used by Maven. [3] Gradle uses a directed acyclic graph to determine the order in which tasks can be run, through providing dependency management. It runs on the ...

  3. Convention over configuration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convention_over_configuration

    The Maven software tool auto-generated this directory structure for a Java project. Many modern frameworks use a convention over configuration approach. The concept is older, however, dating back to the concept of a default, and can be spotted more recently in the roots of Java libraries. For example, the JavaBeans specification relies on it ...

  4. EAR (file format) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EAR_(file_format)

    An EAR file is a standard JAR file (and therefore a Zip file) with an .ear extension, with one or more entries representing the modules of the application, and a metadata directory called META-INF which contains one or more deployment descriptors. META-INF/ application.xml: This is the main deployment descriptor for the EAR. It lists all the ...

  5. List of software package management systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_software_package...

    Gradle: a build system and package manager for Groovy and other JVM languages, and also C++; Ivy: a package manager for Java, integrated into the Ant build tool, also used by sbt; Leiningen: a project automation tool for Clojure; LuaRocks: a programming library and package manager for Lua; Maven: a package manager and build tool for Java

  6. Apache Maven - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_Maven

    Maven was created by Jason van Zyl in 2002 and began as a sub-project of Apache Turbine. In 2003 Maven was accepted as a top level Apache Software Foundation project. Version history: Version 1 - July 2004 - first critical milestone release (now at end of life). Version 2 - October 2005 - after about six months in beta cycles (now at end of life).

  7. Dependency hell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dependency_hell

    This allows an application to request a module/library by a unique name and version number constraints, effectively transferring the responsibility for brokering library/module versions from the applications to the operating system. A shared module can then be placed in a central repository without the risk of breaking applications which are ...

  8. Ports collection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ports_collection

    Being based on the official tools, the "virtual" (non-primary) categories are readily available, and so is the information about the library, build and run-time dependencies. The source of the web-site is heavily based on the ports-readmes port, and is readily available in GitHub. The project is no longer updated since November 2018.

  9. Kotlin (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kotlin_(programming_language)

    Static objects and functions can be defined at the top level of the package without needing a redundant class level. For compatibility with Java, Kotlin provides a JvmName annotation which specifies a class name used when the package is viewed from a Java project. For example, @file:JvmName("JavaClassName").

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