Thank you to everyone who replied so far G-)
Cheers,
mg
On 02/07/2020 09:15, Alessio Stalla wrote:
Projects built with Portofino (https://portofino.manydesigns.com) all
use Groovy as their main implementation language (alongside
JavaScript/TypeScript and maybe some Java).
I've worked on several such projects, but they're all closed-source. A
couple of publicly accessible ones are two applications that we (my
former employer) did for the local University. One is a platform for
running online recruitment procedures
(https://concorsi.unige.it/home/?__language=en), the other, which is
Italian only I think, is a platform to match high-school students with
work experiences at the University
(https://alternanza-scuola-lavoro.unige.it/welcome).
They're both a few years old and built with Portofino 4 and (I think)
Groovy 2.4. So they're MVC web applications.
We've since released Portofino 5 that is REST + Angular instead of
MVC, but it hasn't gained much traction so far.
On Thu, 2 Jul 2020 at 08:32, Kostas Saidis <sai...@gmail.com
<mailto:sai...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Groovy has been my language of choice for some time now (replacing
Java)
and I use it extensively in as many projects as I can.
The two most significant ones are the following.
1. Groovy lies at the heart and soul of the Clyze packaging tool for
Android apps (clyze.com <http://clyze.com>); the Clyze core
contains about 25K SLOC of Groovy.
The tool aims to make the management of ProGuard / R8
configurations as
easy as possible for Android teams and it is currently in an early
access state (we have only announced it on local groups here in
Greece,
so it is really coming to life as we speak). We have been
developing it
at the PLaST lab of the University of Athens for some time now,
where I
provide service as a visiting lecturer in Software Engineering, while
the whole Clyze effort is lead by Yannis Smaragdakis (the lab
director,
Professor @ UoA and a well-known PL -and especially static analysis-
researcher in top-notch events like SPLASH, PLDI, etc). BTW, if
you' re
into Android, we currently look forward to collecting as much
feedback
as possible for the tool, so feel free to experiment with it and
contact
me for any comments, thoughts or insights!
2. Groovy drives the back-end of Butterfly, the digital repository
product we have developed at Niovity, a company that offers digital
library / institutional repository solutions, mainly. Butterfly
contains
about 40K SLOC of Groovy.
Cheers,
Kostas
On 27/6/2020 1:24 π.μ., MG wrote:
> A quick survey: Who on this mailing list works on or knows of a
> project where Groovy is the main language of development, i.e.
it is
> not used as "just" a script or DSL language in addition to e.g.
Java ?
> If possible name the company/country/project and give some
impression
> of the size of the project (lines of code, # of people working
on it,
> etc), timeframe of development, and whether it is os or
commercial (or
> both) G-)
>
> Thanks in advance,
> cheers,
> mg
>
>
>