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Groovy for Domain-Specific Languages, Second Edition

You're reading from   Groovy for Domain-Specific Languages, Second Edition Extend and enhance your Java applications with domain-specific scripting in Groovy

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781849695404
Length 386 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Tools
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Author (1):
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 Dearle Dearle
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Dearle
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Groovy for Domain-specific Languages Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Introduction to DSLs and Groovy 2. Groovy Quick Start FREE CHAPTER 3. Essential Groovy DSLs 4. The Groovy Language 5. Groovy Closures 6. Example DSL – GeeTwitter 7. Power Groovy DSL Features 8. AST Transformations 9. Existing Groovy DSLs 10. Building a Builder 11. Implementing a Rules DSL 12. Integrating It All Index

The closure scope


Closures have access to variables in their surrounding scope. These can be local variables or parameters passed to a method inside which the closure is defined. Here, we can access the name parameter and the local variable salutation in our closure:

def greeting ( name ) {
    def salutation = "Hello"
    def greeter = { println "$salutation , $name" }
    greeter()
}

when: "we call the greeting method"
    greeting("Dolly")
then:
    "Hello , Dolly" == output()

If the closure is defined within a class method, then the object instance fields are also available to the closure. The field member separator, shown in the following code, is also accessible within the closure:

class ClosureInClassMethodScope {
    def separator = ", "
    def greeting ( name ) {
        def salutation = "Hello"
        def greeter = { println "$salutation$separator$name" }
        greeter()
    }
}

given: "A class with a closure in a method"
ClosureInClassMethodScope greeter = new 
ClosureInClassMethodScope...
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