Advertisement
Promo

Enterprise open source Toolkit

Oracle gets Groovy with open-source project

Martin LaMonica CNET News

Published: 15 May 2006 11:10 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Oracle has said it will participate in Grails, an open-source project that seeks to make Java programmers more productive through a close tie-in to the Groovy scripting language.

Grails is a project to create a development framework, a set of prewritten software components designed to speed Web-application creation using Groovy. The name Grails was inspired by Ruby on Rails, a productivity framework for another language called Ruby.

Groovy is a "dynamic", or scripting, language. Dynamic languages are generally designed for speed and simplicity. And unlike other scripting languages, like Python or Ruby, code written with Groovy runs in conjunction with a Java Virtual Machine.

Oracle will have some of its engineers participate in Grails, said Steven G. Harris, vice president of Oracle Fusion Middleware. The company is expected to officially announce its backing of Grails at the JavaOne conference this week, and is participating so that it can tap the growing interest in scripting languages.

"We've just seen this scripting taking off in the developer community," Harris said.

Groovy is designed so programmers can use Java and Groovy within the same development project.

"You get the benefits like the forgiveness and productivity of a scripting language, but you also get the performance, stability and manageability of the Java infrastructure under the covers," said Harris.

Separately, Oracle this week will be releasing TopLink Essentials, software designed to simplify the job of writing Java programs that query back-end databases.

The Oracle software will comply with the Enterprise Java Beans 3.0 standard and be included with Sun's open-source Java application server, Harris said.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Did you find this article useful?
152 out of 239 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments


Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:







Video icon

Video

Discussions

Xwindowsjunkie Xwindowsjunkie

SiO2 is cheaper than Cu

Friday 18 December 2009, 8:00 AM

4 comments
CA CA

Copyright in a new light

Friday 18 December 2009, 3:54 AM

2 comments
CA CA

Inventions and Product Design

Friday 18 December 2009, 3:35 AM

1 comment

Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters