Hi, I have just started to dig into Groovy and have been mostly impressed by what it offers, however when I had a look at handling database calls (http://docs.groovy-lang.org/latest/html/api/groovy/sql/Sql.html) I stumbled upon a rather weird syntax
sql.eachRow('select * from PROJECT where name=:foo', [foo:'Gradle']) { // process row } Usually I'd say this is a "regular" block scope but in this context it was obviously a closure/function pointer/callback. It took me a while to dig into this to find out that it can also be passed as second argument to the method and was added in 2.2 http://www.groovy-lang.org/semantics.html#_calling_a_method_accepting_a_sam_type_with_a_closure https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GROOVY-6188 (the JSR link does not work anymore) My question now is, why? Apparently pre-2.2 one had to cast the closure to the appropriate type. But why making it possible to actually define the closure outside of the respective call? At least for me this is HIGHLY confusing. Thanks