Apache Groovy Explained

Groovy
Logo Caption:Groovy Logo
Paradigm:Multi-paradigm

object-oriented, imperative, functional, aspect-oriented, scripting

Latest Preview Version:4.0.0-beta-1
Latest Preview Date:[1]
Designer:James Strachan
Developer:Guillaume Laforge (PMC Chair)
Jochen Theodorou (Tech Lead)
Paul King
Cedric Champeau
Typing:Dynamic, static, strong, duck
Implementations:Gradle, Grails
Influenced By:Java, Python, Ruby, Smalltalk
Influenced:Kotlin
Platform:Java SE
License:Apache License 2.0
File Ext:.groovy, .gvy, .gy, .gsh[2]

Apache Groovy is a Java-syntax-compatible object-oriented programming language for the Java platform. It is both a static and dynamic language with features similar to those of Python, Ruby, and Smalltalk. It can be used as both a programming language and a scripting language for the Java Platform, is compiled to Java virtual machine (JVM) bytecode, and interoperates seamlessly with other Java code and libraries. Groovy uses a curly-bracket syntax similar to Java's. Groovy supports closures, multiline strings, and expressions embedded in strings. Much of Groovy's power lies in its AST transformations, triggered through annotations.

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.[3] [4] Groovy 2.4 was the last major release under Pivotal Software's sponsorship which ended in March 2015.[5] Groovy has since changed its governance structure to a Project Management Committee in the Apache Software Foundation.[6]

History

James Strachan first talked about the development of Groovy on his blog in August 2003.[7] In March 2004, Groovy was submitted to the JCP as JSR 241[8] and accepted by ballot. Several versions were released between 2004 and 2006. After the Java Community Process (JCP) standardization effort began, the version numbering changed, and a version called "1.0" was released on January 2, 2007. After various betas and release candidates numbered 1.1, on December 7, 2007, Groovy 1.1 Final was released and immediately renumbered as Groovy 1.5 to reflect the many changes made.

In 2007, Groovy won the first prize at JAX 2007 innovation award.[9] In 2008, Grails, a Groovy web framework, won the second prize at JAX 2008 innovation award.[10]

In November 2008, SpringSource acquired the Groovy and Grails company (G2One).[11] In August 2009 VMware acquired SpringSource.[12]

In April 2012, after eight years of inactivity, the Spec Lead changed the status of JSR 241 to dormant.

Strachan had left the project silently a year before the Groovy 1.0 release in 2007. In Oct 2016, Strachan stated "I still love groovy (jenkins pipelines are so groovy!), java, go, typescript and kotlin".[13]

On July 2, 2012, Groovy 2.0 was released, which, among other new features, added static compiling and static type checking.

When the Pivotal Software joint venture was spun-off by EMC Corporation (EMC) and VMware in April 2013, Groovy and Grails formed part of its product portfolio. Pivotal ceased sponsoring Groovy and Grails from April 2015.[5] That same month, Groovy changed its governance structure from a Codehaus repository to a Project Management Committee (PMC) in the Apache Software Foundation via its incubator.[6] Groovy graduated from Apache's incubator and became a top-level project in November 2015.[14]

On February 7, 2020, Groovy 3.0 was released.[15] Version 4.0 was released on January 25, 2022.[16]

Features

Most valid Java files are also valid Groovy files. Although the two languages are similar, Groovy code can be more compact, because it does not need all the elements that Java needs.[17] This makes it possible for Java programmers to learn Groovy gradually by starting with familiar Java syntax before acquiring more Groovy programming idioms.[18]

Groovy features not available in Java include both static and dynamic typing (with the keyword def), operator overloading, native syntax for lists and associative arrays (maps), native support for regular expressions, polymorphic iteration, string interpolation, added helper methods, and the safe navigation operator ?. to check automatically for null pointers (for example, variable?.method, or variable?.field).[19]

Since version 2 Groovy also supports modularity (being able to ship only the needed jars according to the project needs, thus reducing the size of Groovy's library), type checking, static compiling, Project Coin syntax enhancements, multicatch blocks and ongoing performance enhancements using the invokedynamic instruction introduced in Java 7.[20]

Groovy provides native support for various markup languages such as XML and HTML, accomplished via an inline Document Object Model (DOM) syntax. This feature enables the definition and manipulation of many types of heterogeneous data assets with a uniform and concise syntax and programming methodology.

Unlike Java, a Groovy source code file can be executed as an (uncompiled) script, if it contains code outside any class definition, if it is a class with a main method, or if it is a Runnable or GroovyTestCase. A Groovy script is fully parsed, compiled, and generated before executing (similar to Python and Ruby). This occurs under the hood, and the compiled version is not saved as an artifact of the process.[21]

GroovyBeans, properties

GroovyBeans are Groovy's version of JavaBeans. Groovy implicitly generates getters and setters. In the following code, setColor(String color) and getColor are implicitly generated. The last two lines, which appear to access color directly, are actually calling the implicitly generated methods.[22] class AGroovyBean

def myGroovyBean = new AGroovyBean

myGroovyBean.setColor('baby blue')assert myGroovyBean.getColor

'baby blue'

myGroovyBean.color = 'pewter'assert myGroovyBean.color

'pewter'

Groovy offers simple, consistent syntax for handling lists and maps, reminiscent of Java's array syntax.[23] def movieList = ['Dersu Uzala', 'Ran', 'Seven Samurai'] // Looks like an array, but is a listassert movieList[2]

'Seven Samurai'movieList[3] = 'Casablanca' // Adds an element to the listassert movieList.size

4

def monthMap = ['January' : 31, 'February' : 28, 'March' : 31 ] // Declares a mapassert monthMap['March']

31 // Accesses an entrymonthMap['April'] = 30 // Adds an entry to the mapassert monthMap.size

4

Prototype extension

Groovy offers support for prototype extension through ExpandoMetaClass, Extension Modules (only in Groovy 2), Objective-C-like Categories and DelegatingMetaClass.[24]

ExpandoMetaClass offers a domain-specific language (DSL) to express the changes in the class easily, similar to Ruby's open class concept:

Number.metaClass

assert 9.sqrt

3assert 4.sqrt

2

Groovy's changes in code through prototyping are not visible in Java, since each attribute/method invocation in Groovy goes through the metaclass registry. The changed code can only be accessed from Java by going to the metaclass registry.

Groovy also allows overriding methods as getProperty, propertyMissing among others, enabling the developer to intercept calls to an object and specify an action for them, in a simplified aspect-oriented way. The following code enables the class java.lang.String to respond to the hex property:

enum Color

String.metaClass.getProperty =

assert "WHITE".hex

"#FFFFFF"assert "BLUE".hex

"#0000FF"assert "BLACK".hex

"#000000"assert "GREEN".hex

null

The Grails framework uses metaprogramming extensively to enable GORM dynamic finders, like User.findByName('Josh') and others.[25]

Dot and parentheses

Groovy's syntax permits omitting parentheses and dots in some situations. The following groovy code

take(coffee).with(sugar, milk).and(liquor)

can be written as

take coffee with sugar, milk and liquor

enabling the development of domain-specific languages (DSLs) that look like plain English.

Functional programming

Although Groovy is mostly an object-oriented language, it also offers functional programming features.

Closures

According to Groovy's documentation: "Closures in Groovy work similar to a 'method pointer', enabling code to be written and run in a later point in time".[26] Groovy's closures support free variables, i.e. variables that have not been explicitly passed as a parameter to it, but exist in its declaration context, partial application (that it terms 'currying'), delegation, implicit, typed and untyped parameters.

When working on Collections of a determined type, the closure passed to an operation on the collection can be inferred:

list = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]

/* * Non-zero numbers are coerced to true, so when it % 2

0 (even), it is false. * The type of the implicit "it" parameter can be inferred as an Integer by the IDE. * It could also be written as: * list.findAll * list.findAll */def odds = list.findAll

assert odds

[1, 3, 5, 7, 9]

A group of expressions can be written in a closure block without reference to an implementation and the responding object can be assigned at a later point using delegation:

// This block of code contains expressions without reference to an implementationdef operations = /* * This class will handle the operations that can be used in the closure above. Another class * could be declared having the same methods, but using, for example, webservice operations * in the calculations. */class Expression // Here is defined who is going to respond the expressions in the block of code above.operations.delegate = new Expressionoperations

Curry

Usually called partial application,[27] this Groovy feature allows closures' parameters to be set to a default parameter in any of their arguments, creating a new closure with the bound value. Supplying one argument to the curry method will fix argument one. Supplying N arguments will fix arguments 1 .. N.

def joinTwoWordsWithSymbol = assert joinTwoWordsWithSymbol('#', 'Hello', 'World')

'Hello#World'

def concatWords = joinTwoWordsWithSymbol.curry(' ')assert concatWords('Hello', 'World')

'Hello World'

def prependHello = concatWords.curry('Hello')//def prependHello = joinTwoWordsWithSymbol.curry(' ', 'Hello')assert prependHello('World')

'Hello World'

Curry can also be used in the reverse direction (fixing the last N arguments) using rcurry.

def power =

def square = power.rcurry(2)def cube = power.rcurry(3)

assert power(2, 2)

4assert square(4)

16assert cube(3)

27

Groovy also supports lazy evaluation,[28] [29] reduce/fold,[30] infinite structures and immutability,[31] among others.[32]

JSON and XML processing

On JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) and XML processing, Groovy employs the Builder pattern, making the production of the data structure less verbose. For example, the following XML:

Java object oriented static Ruby functional, object oriented duck typing, dynamic Groovy functional, object oriented duck typing, dynamic, static

can be generated via the following Groovy code:

def writer = new StringWriterdef builder = new groovy.xml.MarkupBuilder(writer)builder.languages

and also can be processed in a streaming way through StreamingMarkupBuilder. To change the implementation to JSON, the MarkupBuilder can be swapped to JsonBuilder.[33]

To parse it and search for a functional language, Groovy's findAll method can serve:

def languages = new XmlSlurper.parseText writer.toString

// Here is employed Groovy's regex syntax for a matcher (=~) that will be coerced to a // boolean value: either true, if the value contains our string, or false otherwise.def functional = languages.language.findAll assert functional.collect

["Groovy", "Ruby"]

String interpolation

In Groovy, strings can be interpolated with variables and expressions by using GStrings:[34]

BigDecimal account = 10.0def text = "The account shows currently a balance of $account"assert text

"The account shows currently a balance of 10.0"

GStrings containing variables and expressions must be declared using double quotes.

A complex expression must be enclosed in curly brackets. This prevents parts of it from being interpreted as belonging to the surrounding string instead of to the expression:

BigDecimal minus = 4.0text = "The account shows currently a balance of $"assert text

"The account shows currently a balance of 6.0"

// Without the brackets to isolate the expression, this would result:text = "The account shows currently a balance of $account - minus"assert text

"The account shows currently a balance of 10.0 - minus"

Expression evaluation can be deferred by employing arrow syntax:

BigDecimal tax = 0.15text = "The account shows currently a balance of $"tax = 0.10

// The tax value was changed AFTER declaration of the GString. The expression // variables are bound only when the expression must actually be evaluated:assert text

"The account shows currently a balance of 9.000"

Abstract syntax tree transformation

According to Groovy's own documentation, "When the Groovy compiler compiles Groovy scripts and classes, at some point in the process, the source code will end up being represented in memory in the form of a Concrete Syntax Tree, then transformed into an Abstract Syntax Tree. The purpose of AST Transformations is to let developers hook into the compilation process to be able to modify the AST before it is turned into bytecode that will be run by the JVM. AST Transformations provides Groovy with improved compile-time metaprogramming capabilities allowing powerful flexibility at the language level, without a runtime performance penalty."[35]

Examples of ASTs in Groovy are:

among others.

The testing framework Spock uses AST transformations to allow the programmer to write tests in a syntax not supported by Groovy, but the relevant code is then manipulated in the AST to valid code.[36] An example of such a test is: def "maximum of #a and #b is #c"

Traits

According to Groovy's documentation, "Traits are a structural construct of the language that allows: composition of behaviors, runtime implementation of interfaces, behavior overriding, and compatibility with static type checking/compilation."

Traits can be seen as interfaces carrying both default implementations and state. A trait is defined using the trait keyword:

trait FlyingAbility

Then, it can be used like a normal interface using the keyword implements:

class Bird implements FlyingAbility /* Adds the trait FlyingAbility to the Bird class capabilities */def bird = new Bird /* instantiate a new Bird */assert bird.fly

"I'm flying!" /* the Bird class automatically gets the behavior of the FlyingAbility trait */

Traits allow a wide range of abilities, from simple composition to testing.

Adoption

Notable examples of Groovy adoption include:

IDE support

Many integrated development environments (IDEs) and text editors support Groovy:

Dialects

There is one alternative implementation of Groovy:

See also

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Releases - apache/groovy. GitHub. 2020-04-09.
  2. Web site: Groovy Goodness: Default Groovy Script File Extensions.
  3. Web site: Groovy 2.0 Performance compared to Java . 25 Aug 2012.
  4. Web site: Java vs Groovy2.0 vs Scala Simple Performance Test. 10 Jul 2012. 7 October 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20121210210126/http://blog.evan-wong.com/2012/07/java-vs-groovy20-vs-scala-simple.html. 10 December 2012. dead.
  5. Web site: Groovy 2.4 And Grails 3.0 To Be Last Major Releases Under Pivotal Sponsorship. 19 Jan 2015.
  6. Web site: Groovy joins Apache Incubator. 11 Mar 2015.
  7. Web site: Groovy - the birth of a new dynamic language for the Java platform. https://web.archive.org/web/20030901064404/http://radio.weblogs.com/0112098/2003/08/29.html. dead. 1 September 2003. James Strachan. 29 Aug 2003.
  8. Web site: Java Community Process JSR 241.
  9. Web site: Groovy wins first prize at JAX 2007 innovation award. 2007-04-26. 2012-10-07. https://web.archive.org/web/20150513184206/http://docs.codehaus.org/display/GROOVY/2007/04/26/Groovy+wins+first+prize+at+JAX+2007+innovation+award. 2015-05-13. dead.
  10. Web site: They say a lot can happen over a cup of coffee. 2012-10-07. https://web.archive.org/web/20110419130810/http://jax-award.de/jax_award08/proposal_view_de.php?id=240. 2011-04-19. dead.
  11. Web site: SpringSource Acquires Groovy and Grails company (G2One). 11 Nov 2008.
  12. Web site: VMWare Acquires SpringSource. 10 Aug 2009.
  13. Web site: Tweet from James Strachan . November 24, 2016 . 2016-11-24.
  14. Web site: Announcement on dev mailing list.
  15. Web site: Release GROOVY_3_0_0 · apache/groovy . 2024-03-27 . GitHub . en.
  16. Web site: Release GROOVY_4_0_0 · apache/groovy . 2024-03-27 . GitHub . en.
  17. König 2007, pg. 32
  18. Web site: Groovy style and language feature guidelines for Java developers . Groovy.codehaus.org . 2015-01-22 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150117214709/http://groovy.codehaus.org/Groovy+style+and+language+feature+guidelines+for+Java+developers . 2015-01-17 . dead .
  19. Web site: Groovy – Differences from Java . Groovy.codehaus.org . 2013-08-12 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090317025737/http://groovy.codehaus.org/Differences+from+Java . 2009-03-17 .
  20. Web site: What's new in Groovy 2.0? . 28 Jun 2012.
  21. König 2007, pp. 37-8
  22. König 2007, pp. 38-9
  23. König 2007, pp. 41-3
  24. Web site: JN3525-MetaClasses . 2012-10-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121001122409/http://groovy.codehaus.org/JN3525-MetaClasses . 2012-10-01 . dead .
  25. Web site: Metaprogramming Techniques in Groovy and Grails . 11 Jun 2009.
  26. Web site: Groovy - Closures . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120522213410/http://groovy.codehaus.org/Closures . 2012-05-22 .
  27. http://programmers.stackexchange.com/questions/152868/does-groovy-call-partial-application-currying "Does groovy call partial application 'currying'
  28. Web site: Groovy - Lazy Transformation . 2012-10-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121008091312/http://groovy.codehaus.org/Lazy+transformation . 2012-10-08 . dead .
  29. Web site: Side Notes: Lazy lists in Groovy. 3 Feb 2011.
  30. Web site: Groovy's Fold . 20 Jun 2011 . 12 February 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150213033355/http://bendoerr.me/posts/2011-06-20-groovy-inject.html . 13 February 2015 . dead .
  31. Web site: Functional Programming with Groovy . 5 Nov 2011.
  32. Web site: Function programming in Groovy . 2012-10-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121008095622/http://groovy.codehaus.org/Functional+Programming+with+Groovy . 2012-10-08 . dead .
  33. Web site: JsonBuilder . 2012-10-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121002221510/http://groovy.codehaus.org/gapi/groovy/json/JsonBuilder.html . 2012-10-02 . dead .
  34. Web site: Groovy Strings - Different ways of creating them . 26 Dec 2009.
  35. Web site: Compile-time Metaprogramming - AST Transformations . 2012-10-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121014094900/http://groovy.codehaus.org/Compile-time+Metaprogramming+-+AST+Transformations . 2012-10-14 . dead .
  36. King . Paul . A History of the Groovy Programming Language . Proc. ACM Program. Lang. . 2020 . 4 . 53 . 10.1145/3386326. free .
  37. Web site: ScriptRunner Documentation .
  38. Web site: ScriptRunner Press Release with adoption stats .
  39. Web site: Groovy DSL for OFBiz business logic. Apache OFBiz Project Open Wiki.
  40. Web site: Simple-methods examples using Groovy. Apache OFBiz Project Open Wiki.
  41. Web site: Grails at LinkedIn. 2015-06-02.
  42. Web site: Embedded Groovy Scripting . 2020-11-20 . www.logicmonitor.com .
  43. Web site: Jenkins Pipeline.
  44. Web site: Graeme Rocher's Blog: Sky.com relaunches written in Grails. Graeme Rocher's Blog. October 2, 2008. 2015-06-02. Graeme. Rocher.
  45. https://iotsecurity.eecs.umich.edu/img/Paper27_CameraReady_SmartThings_Revised_IEEEGen.pdf Security Analysis of Emerging Smart Home Applications
  46. Web site: Scripting and the Script Library Scripting & Properties. www.soapui.org. 2015-06-02.
  47. Web site: Chapter 11. Groovy integration. docs.jboss.org. 2015-06-02.
  48. Web site: vCalc, the First ever Social Platform for the world of Math. 4 November 2014. 2016-05-05.
  49. Web site: Wired.Com. www.springsource.org. 2015-06-02.
  50. Web site: XWiki SAS. www.springsource.org. 2015-06-02.
  51. Web site: Grooscript Documentation. 12 Sep 2016. 4 July 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170628212516/http://grooscript.org/doc.html. 28 June 2017. dead.
  52. Web site: Presentation at SpringOne/2GX on Grooscript. 13 Dec 2015.
  53. Web site: Grooscript online conversions. 15 May 2017. 4 July 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170709170154/http://grooscript.org/conversions.html. 9 July 2017. dead.