Is gradle declarative or imperative build tool?
I suppose gradle uses build scripts that can be programmed as per the requirements. Is it a declarative or imperative build tool then?
gradle declarative imperative
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I suppose gradle uses build scripts that can be programmed as per the requirements. Is it a declarative or imperative build tool then?
gradle declarative imperative
add a comment |
I suppose gradle uses build scripts that can be programmed as per the requirements. Is it a declarative or imperative build tool then?
gradle declarative imperative
I suppose gradle uses build scripts that can be programmed as per the requirements. Is it a declarative or imperative build tool then?
gradle declarative imperative
gradle declarative imperative
asked Jan 2 at 10:35
VivekVivek
6,042135884
6,042135884
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In fact, it's both. Gradle
does not force you to be declarative like Maven
or imperative like Ant
, it can and it will probably be both for you.
According to Gradle's documentation :
Well-designed build scripts consist mostly of declarative
configuration rather than imperative logic
As far as you can, use the Gradle's DSL and only use custom conditional blocks when you need to handle specific cases or custom actions.
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
In fact, it's both. Gradle
does not force you to be declarative like Maven
or imperative like Ant
, it can and it will probably be both for you.
According to Gradle's documentation :
Well-designed build scripts consist mostly of declarative
configuration rather than imperative logic
As far as you can, use the Gradle's DSL and only use custom conditional blocks when you need to handle specific cases or custom actions.
add a comment |
In fact, it's both. Gradle
does not force you to be declarative like Maven
or imperative like Ant
, it can and it will probably be both for you.
According to Gradle's documentation :
Well-designed build scripts consist mostly of declarative
configuration rather than imperative logic
As far as you can, use the Gradle's DSL and only use custom conditional blocks when you need to handle specific cases or custom actions.
add a comment |
In fact, it's both. Gradle
does not force you to be declarative like Maven
or imperative like Ant
, it can and it will probably be both for you.
According to Gradle's documentation :
Well-designed build scripts consist mostly of declarative
configuration rather than imperative logic
As far as you can, use the Gradle's DSL and only use custom conditional blocks when you need to handle specific cases or custom actions.
In fact, it's both. Gradle
does not force you to be declarative like Maven
or imperative like Ant
, it can and it will probably be both for you.
According to Gradle's documentation :
Well-designed build scripts consist mostly of declarative
configuration rather than imperative logic
As far as you can, use the Gradle's DSL and only use custom conditional blocks when you need to handle specific cases or custom actions.
answered Jan 2 at 10:53
ToYonosToYonos
11.8k22848
11.8k22848
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