Make sure that the Java-Compile task is not run, e.g. by setting srcDirNames
= [].
Set all Java and Groovy source directories in groovySrcDirNames, e.g. = [
'src-java', 'src-groovy' ]
Martin
Johnny Jian-2 wrote:
>
> I did use the groovy plugin. Here is my build.gradle file:
>
> usePlugin('groovy')
>
> sourceCompatibility = 1.5
> targetCompatibility = 1.5
>
> dependencies {
> addMavenRepo()
> groovy "org.codehaus.groovy:groovy-all:1.5.6"
> compile "junit:junit:4.5"
> compile "cglib:cglib:2.2"
> compile "org.objenesis:objenesis:1.1"
> testCompile "org.hamcrest:hamcrest-library:1.1"
> }
>
>
> On Wed, Mar 18, 2009 at 1:08 AM, Tom Eyckmans <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> You should use the groovy plugin instead of the java plugin, the groovy
>> plugin compiles both java and groovy code.
>>
>> Userdoc of the groovy plugin:
>> http://www.gradle.org/userguide/0.5.2/userguidech11.html#x31-6900011.
>>
>> Thx,
>>
>> Tom
>>
>> 2009/3/17 Johnny Jian <[email protected]>
>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> I got compilation errors of my Java code while the Java code depends on
>>> the Groovy code. I wonder whether gradle has joint compilation, or is
>>> there
>>> a switch?
>>>
>>> Johnny
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
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