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Top > Computers > Programming > Languages > Java > Extensions > Groovy > FAQs, Help, and Tutorials
See also:

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» Practically Groovy: Smooth Operators - Java bans operator overloading. Groovy does not. Learn everyday uses of 3 types of overloadable operators. By Andrew Glover. IBM developerWorks. (October 25, 2005)
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» Practically Groovy: Groovy's Growth Spurt - With release of a JSR-241 compliant parser, changes to Groovy syntax were formalized. Treats most important changes to syntax, shows handy feature not in older Groovy. By Andrew Glover. IBM developerWorks. (July 19, 2005)
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» Practically Groovy: Mark It up with Groovy Builders - Mimic markup languages like XML, HTML, Ant tasks, and GUIs, with frameworks like Swing; useful for fast prototyping; handy alternate to data binding frameworks when needing consumable markup fast. By Andrew Glover. IBM developerWorks. (April 12, 2005)
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» Practically Groovy: Go Server-side up, with Groovy - Groovlet, GroovyServer Pages (GSP) frameworks are built on Java Servlet API. Unlike Struts and JSF, Groovy server isn't for all uses: it is simple alternate for coding server programs fast and easy. By Andrew Glover. IBM developerWorks. (March 15, 2005)
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» Practically Groovy: MVC Programming with Groovy Templates - Views are integral to MVC programming, which is ubiquitous to enterprise programming; shows how Groovy template engine framework simplifies view programming, makes code more maintainable. By Andrew Glover. IBM developerWorks. (February 15, 2005)
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» Practically Groovy: JDBC Programming with Groovy - Shows how to use GroovySql to build simple data-reporting program. GroovySql merges closures and iterators to ease Java Database Connectivity (JDBC) coding by shifting resource management from coder to Groovy framework. By Andrew Glover. IBM developerWorks. (January 11, 2005)
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» Practically Groovy: Ant Scripting with Groovy - Ant and Maven are common in build processing, but XML is sometimes a less expressive configuration format; Groovy builder utility makes it easy to mix Groovy, Ant and Maven for more expressive, controlled builds. By Andrew Glover. IBM developerWorks. (December 14, 2004)
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» Feeling Groovy - Informal introduction to proposed addition to standard programming languages for Java platform. By Andrew Glover. IBM developerWorks. (August 3, 2004)
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