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  1. The Apache Groovy™ programming language

    The Groovy programming language is supported by the Apache Software Foundation and the Groovy community.

  2. The Apache Groovy™ programming language - Documentation

    The Apache Groovy™ documentation is available as a single-page document, or a PDF, or feel free to pick at a direct section below. You can also browse documentation for other versions.

  3. The Apache Groovy programming language - Differences with Java

    Groovy tries to be as natural as possible for Java developers. We’ve tried to follow the principle of least surprise when designing Groovy, particularly for developers learning Groovy who’ve …

  4. The Apache Groovy programming language - Install Groovy

    From the download page, you will be able to download the distribution (binary and source), the Windows installer (a community artifact) and the documentation for Groovy.

  5. The Apache Groovy programming language - Learn

    This book covers Groovy fundamentals, such as installing Groovy, using Groovy tools, and working with the Groovy Development Kit (GDK). You'll also learn more advanced aspects of …

  6. The Apache Groovy programming language - Syntax

    Syntax This chapter covers the syntax of the Groovy programming language. The grammar of the language derives from the Java grammar, but enhances it with specific constructs for Groovy, …

  7. Overview (Groovy 5.0.3)

    An interactive command line terminal along with a Swing console for evaluating Groovy scripts and inspecting objects, AST and bytecode information.

  8. Getting started - Apache Groovy

    Nov 30, 2025 · For a quick and effortless start on Mac OSX, Linux, WSL2 or Cygwin, you can use SDKMAN! (The Software Development Kit Manager) to download and configure any Groovy …

  9. Apache Groovy Documentation

    Latest version documentation api gapi groovy-jdkNext version documentation api gapi groovy-jdk

  10. The Apache Groovy programming language - Object orientation

    Groovy adopts a naming convention that avoids one ambiguity that might seem a little strange but was popular at the time of Groovy’s design and has remained (so far) for historical reasons.