53

GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

  • Upload
    gr8conf

  • View
    2.313

  • Download
    1

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Guillaume Laforge, Groovy Project Manager, present the new features and improvements in Groovy 1.6.

Citation preview

Page 1: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge
Page 2: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

What’s new in Groovy 1.6?

Get started with Groovy and learn about all the novelties in the latest release

Guillaume LaforgeHead of Groovy Development

Page 3: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

Guillaume LaforgeGroovy Project Manager — SpringSource

> Working on Groovy since 2003> JSR-241 Spec Lead

> Initiator of the Grails web framework

> Co-author of Groovy in Action

> Speaker: JavaOne, QCon, JavaPolis/Devoxx, JavaZone, Sun Tech Days, SpringOne/The Spring Experience, JAX, DSL DevCon, and more…

3

Page 4: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

What’s new in Groovy 1.6?Article Published by InfoQ

> This presentation was prepared with the examples I’ve used in my article written for InfoQ

> http://www.infoq.com/articles/groovy-1-6

> Read this article for more detailed explanations of all the new features in Groovy 1.6

4

Page 5: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

> Groovy Overview> Performance Improvements> Syntax Enhancements> Compile-Time Metaprogramming> The Grape Module System> Swing-Related Improvements> Runtime Metaprogramming

Additions> JSR-223 Scripting Engine Built-In> JMX Builder> OSGi Readiness

5

Agenda

Page 6: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

Groovy in a NutshellSimplify the Life of Java Developers

> Groovy is a dynamic language for the JVM With a Meta-Object Protocol Compiles down to bytecode

> Open Source Apache licensed project

> Relaxed grammar derived from the Java 5 grammar Borrowed some good ideas from Smalltalk/Python/Ruby Java 5 features out of the box:

annotations, generics, static imports, enums… Flat learning curve

6

Page 7: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

A Taste of Groovy — Take 1A Normal Java Program

> public class HelloWorld { private String name;

public void setName(String name) { this.name = name; }

public String getName() { return name; }

public String greet() { return "Hello " + name; }

public static void main(String[] args) { HelloWorld helloWorld = new HelloWorld(); helloWorld.setName("Groovy"); System.out.println( helloWorld.greet() ); }}

7

Page 8: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

8

> public class HelloWorld { private String name;

public void setName(String name) { this.name = name; }

public String getName() { return name; }

public String greet() { return "Hello " + name; }

public static void main(String[] args) { HelloWorld helloWorld = new HelloWorld(); helloWorld.setName("Groovy"); System.out.println( helloWorld.greet() ); }}

A Taste of Groovy — Take 2A Normal Groovy Program

Page 9: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

> class HelloWorld { String name String greet() { "Hello $name" }}

def helloWorld = new HelloWorld(name: "Groovy")println helloWorld.greet()

9

A Taste of Groovy — Take 3A Groovier Program

Page 10: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

The Groovy Web ConsoleA Groovy Playground

> Groovy works nicely on Google App Engine You can also deploy Grails applications

> You can play with Groovy in the web console http://groovyconsole.appspot.com/

10

Page 11: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

11

The Groovy Web ConsoleA Screenshot

Page 12: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

Features at a Glance

> Fully Object-Oriented> Joint compiler: seamless Java integration> Closures: reusable blocks of code / anon functions> Properties: forget about getters and setters> Optional typing: your choice!> BigDecimal arithmetic by default for floating point> Handy APIs

XML, JDBC, JMX, template engine, Swing UIs> Strong ability for authoring Domain-Specific

Languages Syntax-level “builders” Adding properties to numbers: 10.dollars Operator overloading: 10.meters + 20.kilometers

12

Page 13: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

Joint Compilation

• Total Java interoperability• Concretely, what does it mean?

13

JInterface

<<implements>>

GClass

JClass

GInterface

JClass

GClass

<<implements>>

Page 14: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

Native Syntax Constructs

• Lists–def numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

• Maps–def map = [FR: ‘France’, BE: ‘Belgium’]

• Ranges–def allowed = 18..65

• Regular expressions–def whitespace = ~/\s+?/–if (‘foo’ ==~ /o+/) { ... }

14

Page 15: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

GStrings!

• GStrings are... interpolated strings–Sorry, not really what you expected!–Placeholder variables are replaced –You can have multiline strings

• def person = ‘John’def letter = “““${new Date()} Dear ${person}, I hope you’re fine!”””

15

Page 16: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

Closures

• Closures are reusable and assignable code blocks or anonymous functions–No need to wait for Java 7/8/9 to get them!–def greet = { println “Hello ${it}” }greet(“Guillaume”)

• You can pass parameters–def greet = { String name -> println “Hello ${name}” }

• You can passe closures around–def method(Closure c) { c(“Hello”) }method(greet)

16

Page 17: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

BigDecimal Arithmetic

17

• Main reason why financial institutions often decide to use Groovy for their business rules!–Although these days rounding issues are overrated!

• Java vs Groovy for a simple interpolation equation

• BigDecimal uMinusv = c.subtract(a); BigDecimal vMinusl = b.subtract(c); BigDecimal uMinusl = a.subtract(b); return e.multiply(uMinusv) .add(d.multiply(vMinusl)) .divide(uMinusl, 10, BigDecimal.ROUND_HALF_UP);

• (d * (b - c) + e * (c - a)) / (a - b)

Page 18: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

Groovy Builders

• The Markup builder–Easy way for creating XML or HTML content

– def mkp = new MarkupBuilder()mkp.html { head { title “Groovy in Action” } body { div(width: ‘100’) { p(class: ‘para’) { span “Best book ever!” } } }}

18

Page 19: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

Parsing XML

• And it’s so easy to parser XML and navigate through the node graph!

• def geocodingUrl = "http://...".toURL()geocodingUrl.withInputStream { stream -> def node = new XmlSlurper().parse(stream) if (node.Response.Status.code == "200") { def text = node.Response.Placemark. Point.coordinates.text() def coord = text.tokenize(','). collect{ Float.parseFloat(it) } (latitude, longitude) = coord[1..0] }}

19

Page 20: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

> Groovy Overview> Performance Improvements> Syntax Enhancements> Compile-Time Metaprogramming> The Grape Module System> Swing-Related Improvements> Runtime Metaprogramming

Additions> JSR-223 Scripting Engine Built-In> JMX Builder> OSGi Readiness

20

Agenda

Page 21: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

Performance ImprovementsBoth Runtime & Compile-Time

> The Groovyc compiler is 3x to 5x faster With a clever class lookup cache

> Certain online micro-benchmarks show150% to 460% increase in performance compared to Groovy 1.5 Thanks to advanced call-site caching techniques Beware of micro-benchmarks!

> Makes Groovy one of the fastest dynamic languages available

21

Page 22: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

> Groovy Overview> Performance Improvements> Syntax Enhancements> Compile-Time Metaprogramming> The Grape Module System> Swing-Related Improvements> Runtime Metaprogramming

Additions> JSR-223 Scripting Engine Built-In> JMX Builder> OSGi Readiness

22

Agenda

Page 23: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

Multiple AssignmentAssign Multiple Variables at Once

> Newly defined variables def (a, b) = [1, 2]assert a == 1assert b == 2

> Assign to existing variables def lat, lng(lat, lng) = geocode(‘Paris’)

> The classical swap case (a, b) = [b, a]

> Extra elements ⇒ not assigned to any variable> Less elements ⇒ null into extra variables

23

Page 24: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

More Optional ReturnIn if/else and try/catch Blocks

> The return keyword is optional for the last expression of a method body But if/else & try/catch didn’t return any value

> def method() { if (true) 1 else 0 }assert method() == 1

> def method(bool) { try { if (bool) throw new Exception("foo") 1 } catch(e) { 2 } finally { 3 }} assert method(false) == 1assert method(true) == 2

24

Page 25: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

Annotation DefinitionThe Missing Bit of Java 5 Support

> Groovy support for Java 5 features is now complete with the missing annotation definition

> Nothing to show here, it’s just normal Java :-)

> Note that the sole dynamic language supporting annotation is… Groovy Opens the door to EJB3 / JPA / Spring annotations /

Guice / TestNG…

25

Page 26: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

> Groovy Overview> Performance Improvements> Syntax Enhancements> Compile-Time Metaprogramming> The Grape Module System> Swing-Related Improvements> Runtime Metaprogramming

Additions> JSR-223 Scripting Engine Built-In> JMX Builder> OSGi Readiness

26

Agenda

Page 27: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

Meta-What?Meta-Programming

> The ability of a language to modify itself

> Groovy 1.6 introduces AST Transformations Abstract Syntax Tree

> Goodbye to a lot of boiler-plate technical code!

> Two kinds of transformations Global transformations Local transformations: triggered by annotations

27

Page 28: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

AST Transformations in 1.6Implement Patterns through Transformations

> Several transformations find their way in Groovy 1.6

@Singleton — okay, not really a pattern ;-) @Immutable, @Lazy, @Delegate @Newify @Category and @Mixin @PackageScope

Swing’s @Bindable and @Vetoable

Grape’s @Grab

> Let’s have a look at some of them!

28

Page 29: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

@Singleton(Anti-)Pattern Revisited

> The evil Java singleton public class Evil { public static final Evil instance = new Evil (); private Evil () {} Evil getInstance() { return instance; }

}

> In Groovy: @Singleton class Evil {}

> There’s also a « lazy » version @Singleton(lazy = true) class Evil {}

29

Page 30: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

@ImmutableThe Immutable… Boiler-Plate Code

> To properly implement immutable classes No mutators (state musn’t change) Private final fields Defensive copying of mutable components Proper equals() / hashCode() / toString() for

comparisons or for keys in maps, etc.

> In Groovy @Immutable final class Coordinates { Double lat, lng}def c1 = new Coordinates(lat: 48.8, lng: 2.5)def c2 = new Coordinates(48.8, 2.5)assert c1 == c2

30

Page 31: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

@LazyNot Just for Lazy Dudes!

> When you need to lazy evaluate / instantiate complex data structures for class fields, mark them as @Lazy

class Dude { @Lazy pets = retriveFromSlowDB()}

> Groovy will handle the boiler-plate code for you

31

Page 32: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

@DelegateNot Just for Managers!

> You can delegate to fields of your class Think multiple inheritance class Employee { def doTheWork() { "done" }}

class Manager { @Delegate Employee slave = new Employee()}def god = new Manager()assert god.doTheWork() == "done"

> Damn manager who will get all the praise…

32

Page 33: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

> Groovy Overview> Performance Improvements> Syntax Enhancements> Compile-Time Metaprogramming> The Grape Module System> Swing-Related Improvements> Runtime Metaprogramming

Additions> JSR-223 Scripting Engine Built-In> JMX Builder> OSGi Readiness

33

Agenda

Page 34: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

Grab a GrapeGroovy Advanced Packaging Engine

> Helps you distribute scripts without dependencies> Just declare your dependencies with @Grab

Will look for dependencies in Maven or Ivy repositories

> @Grab(group = 'org.mortbay.jetty', module = 'jetty-embedded', version = '6.1.0')def startServer() { def srv = new Server(8080) def ctx = new Context(srv , "/", SESSIONS) ctx.resourceBase = "." ctx.addServlet(GroovyServlet, "*.groovy") srv.start()}

34

Page 35: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

> Groovy Overview> Performance Improvements> Syntax Enhancements> Compile-Time Metaprogramming> The Grape Module System> Swing-Related Improvements> Runtime Metaprogramming

Additions> JSR-223 Scripting Engine Built-In> JMX Builder> OSGi Readiness

35

Agenda

Page 36: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

@Bindable (1/2)Event-Driven Made Easy

> Speaking of boiler-plate code… property change listeners

> import java.beans.PropertyChangeSupport;import java.beans.PropertyChangeListener;

public class MyBean { private String prop; PropertyChangeSupport pcs = new PropertyChangeSupport(this);

public void addPropertyChangeListener(PropertyChangeListener l) { pcs.add(l); }

public void removePropertyChangeListener(PropertyChangeListener l) { pcs.remove(l); }

public String getProp() { return prop; }

public void setProp(String prop) { pcs.firePropertyChanged("prop", this.prop, this.prop = prop); }}

36

Page 37: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

> Groovy’s solution

class MyBean { @Bindable String prop}

> Interesting in Griffon and Swing builder

textField text: bind { myBean.prop }

> Also of interest: @Vetoable

37

@Bindable (2/2)Event-Driven Made Easy

Page 38: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

GriffonThe Swing MVC Framework

> Leverages Groovy’s SwingBuilder and Grails’ infrastructure

http://griffon.codehaus.org

38

Page 39: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

Swing Console Improvements

> The console can be run as an applet> Code indentation support> Script drag’n drop> Add JARs in the classpath from the GUI> Execution results visualization plugin> Clickable stacktraces and error messages

> Not intended to be a full-blown IDE, but handy

39

Page 40: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

40

Page 41: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

> Groovy Overview> Performance Improvements> Syntax Enhancements> Compile-Time Metaprogramming> The Grape Module System> Swing-Related Improvements> Runtime Metaprogramming Additions> JSR-223 Scripting Engine Built-In> JMX Builder> OSGi Readiness

41

Agenda

Page 42: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

ExpandoMetaClass DSLLess Repetition

> EMC is a way to change the behavior of types at runtime

> Before Number.metaClass.multiply = { Amount amount -> amount.times(delegate) }Number.metaClass.div = { Amount amount -> amount.inverse().times(delegate) }

> Now in Groovy 1.6 Number.metaClass { multiply { Amount amount -> amount.times(delegate) } div { Amount amount -> amount.inverse().times(delegate) }}

42

Page 43: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

Runtime MixinsInject New Behavior to Types at Runtime

> class FlyingAbility { def fly() { "I'm ${name} and I fly!" }}

class JamesBondVehicle { String getName() { "James Bond's vehicle" }}

JamesBondVehicle.mixin FlyingAbility

assert new JamesBondVehicle().fly() == "I'm James Bond's vehicle and I fly!"

43

Page 44: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

> Groovy Overview> Performance Improvements> Syntax Enhancements> Compile-Time Metaprogramming> The Grape Module System> Swing-Related Improvements> Runtime Metaprogramming

Additions> JSR-223 Scripting Engine Built-In> JMX Builder> OSGi Readiness

44

Agenda

Page 45: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

javax.script.* Scripting APIsGroovy Scripting Engine Built-In

> The JSR-223 / javax.script.* scripting engine for Groovy is bundled in Groovy 1.6

import javax.script.*

def manager = new ScriptEngineManager()def engine = manager.getEngineByName("groovy")

assert engine.evaluate("2 + 3") == 5

> To evaluate Groovy scripts at runtime in your application, just drop the Groovy JAR in your classpath!

45

Page 46: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

> Groovy Overview> Performance Improvements> Syntax Enhancements> Compile-Time Metaprogramming> The Grape Module System> Swing-Related Improvements> Runtime Metaprogramming

Additions> JSR-223 Scripting Engine Built-In> JMX Builder> OSGi Readiness

46

Agenda

Page 47: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

JMX Builder (1/2)Domain-Specific Language for JMX

• Simplify JMX handling with a Builder pattern approach• Declaratively expose Java/Groovy objects as MBeans• JMX's event model support

–Inline closures to create event handler & broadcaster–Closures for receiving event notifications

• Provides a flexible registration policy for MBean• Exposes attribute, constructors, operations,

parameters, and notifications• Simplified creation of connector servers & clients• Support for exporting JMX timers• http://groovy.codehaus.org/Groovy+JmxBuilder

47

Page 48: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

> Create a connector server def jmx = new JmxBuilder()jmx.connectorServer(port:9000).start()

> Create a connector client jmx.connectorClient(port:9000).connect()

> Export a bean jmx.export { bean new MyService() }

> Defining a timer jmx.timer(name: "jmx.builder:type=Timer", event: "heartbeat", period: "1s").start()

> JMX listener jmx.listener(event: "…", from: "foo", call: { event -> …})

48

JMX Builder (2/2)Domain-Specific Language for JMX

Page 49: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

> Groovy Overview> Performance Improvements> Syntax Enhancements> Compile-Time Metaprogramming> The Grape Module System> Swing-Related Improvements> Runtime Metaprogramming

Additions> JSR-223 Scripting Engine Built-In> JMX Builder> OSGi Readiness

49

Agenda

Page 50: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

OSGi Readiness

> The Groovy JAR contains OSGi metadata Can be reused in OSGi containers out-of-the-box

> Tutorials on Groovy and OSGi http://groovy.codehaus.org/OSGi+and+Groovy Will show you how to load Groovy as a service, write,

publish and consume Groovy services, and more

50

Page 51: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

Summary

Page 52: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

SummaryJust Remember that Groovy Rocks! :-)

> Any Java developer is a Groovy developer!> Great for your next-generation general purpose

programming language, as well as for admin tasks, extending apps, writing DSLs...

> Groovy 1.6 provides Important performance gains Efficient compile-time metaprogramming hooks New useful features (JMX, javax.script.*, etc.) A script dependencies system Various Swing-related improvements Several runtime metaprogramming additions

> Get it now! http://groovy.codehaus.org/Download

52

Page 53: GR8Conf 2009: What's New in Groovy 1.6? by Guillaume Laforge

Questions & Answers