❯ Guillaume Laforge

Posts

GR8Conf is coming to Australia

The now famous GR8Conf conference dedicated to all things Groovy, is now coming to Australia, as announced on the GR8Conf blog! It will take place in Canberra, side by side with the Open Source Developers Conference (OSDC), on November 15th. The GR8Conf Australia website is already up and is running a Call for Papers. So if you have a presentation on Groovy, Grails, Griffon, Gradle, Spock, CodeNarc, Gaelyk, etc, with introductions, deep dives, case studies, and so on, feel free to submit a talk! Read more...

Groovy AST transformations tutorials

Groovy is a powerful language that gives the opportunity to its users to plugin into the compilation process to create what we call AST transformations, ie. the ability to customize the Abstract Syntax Tree representing your programs before the compiler walks this tree to generate Java bytecode. Since Groovy 1.6, many useful such transformations have been added to Groovy, like @Delegate to implement delegation, @Immutable to make your types immutable, or @Grab to add dependencies to your scripts, and many more. Read more...

Lots of Gradle news and activity

The Gradle project is moving quickly towards its final version and we hear more and more projects adopting or migrating to Gradle for their build and project automation. Gradle founder Hans Dokter pushed very interesting posts those past days: On our way to Gradle 1.0: where he explains the current features being worked on before being able to reach 1.0, with a strong focus on three key aspects: the new dependency cache, the daemon, and performance improvements. Read more...

Groovy on GitHub

Groovy completed successfully its move to the Git SCM this summer, thanks to Matthew’s help. For helping everybody get up-to-speed with Git, I’ve added a page about Git on the Groovy wiki. We also now have a “groovy” organization on GitHub: https://github.com/groovy/groovy-core Our three main branches have been pushed there: master, GROOVY_1_8_X and GROOVY_1_7_X. But I’ve not pushed the tags though. The GitHub repository serves as a mirror, and the Groovy despots will be able to regularly push the latest changes to GitHub, and deal with pull requests and such. Read more...

Playing with the Google+ APIs in Groovy

As soon as I heard about the opening of the Google+ APIs, letting us access public posts in our Google+ streams, I wanted to play with them, and integrate my posts in my social stream on my blog. First of all, a little screenshot, where you’ll see the Google+ item at the bottom: Now, a bit of code? Yeah, of course. First of all, you’ll need to follow the explanations of the Google+ API portal to get your own API key (I’ll hide mine in this example so you don’t use mine). Read more...

Groovy, fastest growing language according to eWeek

I’ve just come across eWeek’s latest article on programming languages trends, and they announce that Groovy is the fastest growing language! The data shows the percentage of jobs that have increased (or decreased) for various programming languages since November 2009. In the time frame this slide show depicts, Groovy saw the largest increase in jobs, followed by C# andβ€”surprisinglyβ€”COBOL. Of course, we still have a lot of work to do to continue growing, and stay the most popular and successful alternative language for the JVM, but it’s great to see such confirmations on a famous online business journal. Read more...

The many ways to lace your shoes

In my feed reader, I came across this nice image showing the many ways to lace your shoes! I selected one of those that I’d like to try some day, it’s very nice looking: I think I’ve been using essentially the 4th and 7th for years. Which lacing scheme do you use? Update: There are even sites dedicated to shoe lacing!

A new skin for the Groovy website

In the coming months, the Groovy team will be working on a nicer website with a web designer and better and up-to-date documentation. Obviously, this will take quite some time (especially for the content, more than for the look), but in the meantime, I wanted to refresh the look of the Groovy website a bit. So I spent several hours today and tonight playing with CSS3! I used Twitter’s Bootstrap grid system which is quite neat. Read more...

Groovy 1.8.2 and 1.9-beta-3 are in the wild

This is with great pleasure that the Groovy development team announces the joint releases of Groovy 1.8.2 and 1.9-beta-3. The big highlight of this release is the completion of the primitive type arithmetics performance optimizations. Microbenchmarks affictionados should be happy, and those wanting to do some number crunching should see better results with these improvements. Other than that, those two releases are essentially about bug fixes. You can have a look at the release notes here: http://jira. Read more...

Google App Engine's new pricing model

I’m quite disappointed by Google App Engine’s new pricing model. I was aware of the changes, the upcoming prices and quotas, but I wasn’t expecting my small low-trafic apps to go beyond the free quotas, and force me to have to pay for those small Gaelyk apps! The big problem is the cost of the “frontend instance hours”. An app running all the time, with low trafic, but enough to keep a frontend instance running all day will cost you 30 bucks a month with this new pricing policy. Read more...