Updating the answer as per the latest gradle versions.
From gradle's official documentation at below link:
https://docs.gradle.org/current/userguide/upgrading_version_5.html
Deprecations
Dependencies should no longer be declared using the compile and runtime configurations The usage of the compile and runtime
configurations in the Java ecosystem plugins has been discouraged
since Gradle 3.4.
The implementation, api, compileOnly and runtimeOnly configurations should be used to declare dependencies and the compileClasspath and
runtimeClasspath configurations to resolve dependencies.
More so, the compile dependency configuration has been removed in the recently released Gradle 7.0 version.
If you try to use compile in your Gradle 3.4+ project you’ll get a warning like this:
Deprecated Gradle features were used in this build, making it
incompatible with Gradle 7.0. Use ‘–warning-mode all’ to show the
individual deprecation warnings.
You should always use implementation rather than compile for dependencies, and use runtimeOnly instead of runtime.
What is an implementation dependency?
When you’re building and running a Java project there are two classpaths involved:
Compile classpath – Those dependencies which are required for the JDK to be able to compile Java code into .class files.
Runtime classpath – Those dependencies which are required to actually run the compiled Java code.
When we’re configuring Gradle dependencies all we’re really doing is configuring which dependencies should appear on which classpath. Given there are only two classpaths, it makes sense that we have three options to declare our dependencies.
- compileOnly – put the dependency on the compile classpath only.
- runtimeOnly – put the dependency on the runtime classpath only.
- implementation – put the dependency on both classpaths.
Use the implementation dependency configuration if you need the dependency to be on both the compile and runtime classpaths. If not,
consider compileOnly or runtimeOnly.