5

I'm new to Groovy and I'm trying to write a mini DSL for some specific task. For this purpose I've been trying to solve a problem like this below: I'd like to print (and/or return) 5 by calling this code (without using parantheses):

give me 5 

I expected that a definition like this below would work:

def give = {clos ->  return clos} 
def me = {clos ->  println clos; return clos} 

but actually it doesn't. Could you please help me how to define "give" and "me" in order to return the value 5 with the expression "give me 5" where me must be a closure, give could be also metaClass, property etc.

Thanks in advance! Iv

3 Answers 3

3

Groovy 1.8+ takes

give me 5

and the parser effectively tries to do:

give( me ).5

So, if you write your code like this, it works:

def give = { map ->  map } 
def me = [:].withDefault { it }

a = give me 5

println a

prints:

5
8
  • Thank you! That's exactly what I was looking for. Could you reference some place where I can read more about the [:].withDefault construction?
    – ivita
    Aug 10, 2012 at 9:45
  • @ivita No worries! It's defined here. One thing to be aware of is that the '5' it is printing out is actually a String, and not an Integer. This is because it tries to get 5 as a property name (String), so returns a String as well
    – tim_yates
    Aug 10, 2012 at 9:52
  • I need it as string :-) Thanks!
    – ivita
    Aug 10, 2012 at 12:30
  • @tim Perhaps you should note your answer only works in Groovy 1.8 and later. Aug 10, 2012 at 13:05
  • @tim I did my rules in the way you suggested, now the problem is how to add more metaclass methods on the right. E.g.
    – ivita
    Aug 14, 2012 at 5:59
1

Your closures are correct. Braces are missing. Try this

give(me(5)) or 
give me(5)

Else if you completely need to eliminate braces, assign the portions to a variable so as to let the parser understand what exactly needs to be passed.

five = me 5
give five
1
  • Thanks, this works, but I forgot to mention that I want my rules to work without parentheses. Do you have any idea how to do that?
    – ivita
    Aug 10, 2012 at 9:32
-1

What is your method meant to do? You've written a syntactic requirement:

give me 5

If the me could be you, you'd need:

give("me", 5)
give "me", 5 //equivalent "DSL" notation
give("you", 7)
give "you", 7 //equivalent "DSL" notation

//or...
def me= "Mickey", you= "Donald"
give(me, 5)
give me, 5 //equivalent "DSL" notation
give(you, 7)
give you, 7 //equivalent "DSL" notation

If the me never changes, the semantics is closest to:

giveMe(5)
giveMe 5 //equivalent "DSL" notation

You've written "me must be a closure" and "I want my rules to work without parentheses", starting from syntactic constraints. Always start from semantic requirements :-)

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