Photo by Aleksi Tappura on UnsplashGradle 7.0ããå°å ¥ããã Version catalog ã使ã£ãã©ã¤ãã©ãªç®¡çæ¹æ³ã«ã¤ãã¦ã¾ã¨ãã¦ããã¾ãã ã¾ããGradle 7.2ã§ã¯ããã¤ãæ¹åãããã¦ãã®ã§ãä»åã¯Gradle 7.2ã使ã£ã¦ããã¾ãã Gradleã§ä½¿ç¨ããã©ã¤ãã©ãªã®ä¾åé¢ä¿ãå®ç¾©ããã¨ãã«ãããã¾ã§ããããããªæ¹æ³ãããã¾ãããä¾ãã°ãextra propertiesãå®ç¾©ããããbuildSrcã§å®ç¾©ãããããªã©ã ãããã®æ¹æ³ã¨ã¯å¥ã« Version catalog ã¨ããæ°ããæ¹æ³ã使ããã¨ãã§ããããã«ãªãã¾ããã Version catalogã®å®ç¾©Version Catalogã使ã£ã¦ã©ã®ããã«ã©ã¤ãã©ãªã管çããããè¦ã¦ããã¾ããä¾ã¨ãã¦ãandroidxã®viewmodelã¨livedataã使ãå ´åã§ãã s
The goal of this plugin was to eventually no longer be needed, being superseded by built-in features. This has become a reality with Gradle 5.2 and IntelliJ IDEA 2019.1. tl;dr: this plugin is obsolete, don't use it. If you're using Eclipse though, continue reading. It originally did a few things to make it easier/safer to use Java annotation processors in a Gradle build. Those things are now avail
Even though I was supposed to write a series of blog posts about micro-infra-spring here at Too Much Coding blog, today I'll write about how we've managed to decrease our biggest project's build time from 90 to 8 minutes! At one of the companies that I've been working we've faced a big problem related to pull request build times. We have one monolithic application that we are in progress of slicin
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