Hi,
It was a good reply. Made a lot of sense. By the way I am reading the book Java power tools too. Didnt see anything related to ivy in it so far. Hope it appears later in the book. Thanks. R Tobias Hilka wrote: > > Hi, > > ivy is more for dependency management, which is a part of maven. In > combination with Ant, you can run any tool for which an ant task exists. > Especially for Code Coverage, checkstyle and pmd there are ant tasks to do > that. (I currently do that in combination with Hudson CI server in our > projects) > > I would recommend to take a look at the Java Power Tools book which > explains > all this stuff in detail. > > > Freundliche Grüße / Best regards > > Tobias Hilka > Vice President Application Software Development > > vps ID Systeme GmbH > > -- > vps ID Systeme GmbH > Sitz / Registered Office: Ettlingen > Registergericht / Commercial Registry: Amtsgericht Mannheim HRB 361519 > Geschäftsführer / General Manager: Jürgen König > -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- > Von: Raster3 [mailto:[email protected]] > Gesendet: Montag, 14. Juni 2010 13:11 > An: [email protected] > Betreff: Beginners doubt in ivy > > > Hi, > > I started learning ivy yesterday. > Was able to follow through the examples. > As would be expected I am trying to compare with Maven. > > In Maven I can provide for code-coverage, checkstyle, pmd reports in > addition to building the application artifact. > > Is this possible in ivy? > > R > -- > View this message in context: > http://old.nabble.com/Beginners-doubt-in-ivy-tp28878243p28878243.html > Sent from the ivy-user mailing list archive at Nabble.com. > > > > -- View this message in context: http://old.nabble.com/Beginners-doubt-in-ivy-tp28878243p28879506.html Sent from the ivy-user mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
