Actually, for Gpars, that's in the Groovy binary zip, so that's included already.
On Sun, Feb 17, 2019 at 6:42 PM Keegan Witt <keeganw...@gmail.com> wrote: > > I hear you. But where do you draw the line? > > There are a lot of popular libraries we also could include besides Gpars and > Scriptom (e.g. Geb, Spock, groovy-wslite, http-builder-ng, Gru, gstorm, dru, > GroovyServ, Gaiden, shoogr, etc) -- and those are just some ones with commits > in the last year that aren't for building or hosting web stuff. There are > many more besides this. And because it's just a bundle including whatever > the latest versions were at the time of a Groovy release for a specific > selection of projects (and not a project like sdkman), there's no way to mix > & match versions or upgrade independent of a Groovy release. > Although I guess if we want the installer to include a bunch of different > library options, maybe we could have the installer fetch the requested jars > from the internet, I suppose. Though I'm not sure how the file GUIDs would > work if we did that. MSIs I've seen that do that (like have .NET Framework > as a dependency) usually invoke a separate MSI for each dependency. > > -Keegan > > > On Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 2:13 AM Daniel Sun <realblue...@hotmail.com> wrote: >> >> Yep. e.g. banks usually does not allow employees access Internet. Luckily >> some of them will setup maven server. >> >> Cheers, >> Daniel.Sun >> >> >> >> >> -- >> Sent from: http://groovy.329449.n5.nabble.com/Groovy-Users-f329450.html