Having GroovyFX in Bintray and Maven Central (thanks to Sonatype’s OSS hosting) makes it simple to use GroovyFX in everything from simple test scripts to larger projects. The Maven coordinates are as follows:
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groupId: org.groovyfx
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artifactId: groovyfx
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version: {version}
GroovyFX is simple to include in Groovy scripts thanks to Groovy’s Grab annotation, a part of the Grape system. Just include the following line at the top of your script:
@Grab('org.groovyfx:groovyfx:{version}')
It is also simple to set up your own GroovyFX-based project using Gradle as the build system. This sample build.gradle script will get you started.
Just create a new directory for your project and place the Gradle script into it. Then simply execute the following command:
gradle makeDirs
to set up the rest of your project’s directory structure. You will automatically have a dependency on both Groovy and GroovyFX.
GroovyFX’s build script is capable of generating all of the project files necessary to build the project with IntelliJ IDEA. Just run the following command from the project’s root directory:
gradlew idea
This will generate a groovyfx.ipr file. From IntelliJ IDEA, select File → Open Project and navigate to the directory containing the groovyfx.ipr file and open it. You should now be able to build the library and run the demos with IntelliJ IDEA.
Install the NetBeans Gradle Plugin (which should be in the list of plugins offered as standard, but failing that there see http://plugins.netbeans.org/plugin/44510/gradle-support). Using the open a new project dialogue, navigate to the GroovyFX project directory and you should see the Gradle logo indicating you can open this as a Gradle project. You should now be able to build the library and run the demos with NetBeans.