InfoQ Homepage Development Content on InfoQ
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New in ECMAScript 2016 and Beyond
Brian Terlson discusses the changes in the ES2016 specification process and some of the likely candidates including async functions, SIMD, class property declarations, Typed Objects and more.
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Behind the OSS Curtain: How we Manage Spring
Baruch Sadogursky and Phil Webb discuss using Artifactory/Bintray to manage the code, issues and releases of the Spring Framework.
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HTTP/2 for the Web Developer
Brian Clozel discusses the main features of HTTP/2 to understand how it will improve latency on the web, with concrete examples of how it could be integrated in front-end and Spring web applications.
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Functional Programming Kata with Groovy
Scott Hickey works through a solution to the Bank OCR kata, using Groovy and functional programming techniques. The code uses recursion plus Groovy methods that support functional programming.
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Groovy AST Transformations
Paul King reviews some of the most useful of the Groovy built-in AST transformations. He talks about the internal workings of AST transformations and how to write your own.
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The Hypermedia API Pivot
Nick MacDonald discusses a project’s transformation using hypermedia APIs, which has provided them with a simplified backbone to evolve internally and across boundaries.
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The Future of the Web Platform: Does It Have One?
Alex Russell discusses the impact of new standards-track technologies like Service Workers, Web Manifests, and Web Push which are landing in browsers.
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Spring Boot is Made for Tooling
Yann Cébron and Stéphane Nicoll take a look at some features from IntelliJ IDEA that help one get started with Spring Boot, dealing with configuration management and be more efficient.
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Geb in the Browser
Ken Kousen talks about Geb, which makes it easy to automate browser-based applications. Geb is based on the Spock testing framework, providing a straightforward syntax and easy execution model.
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Full Stack Groovy Developer
Iván López presents the technological stack of Polaromatic, and demonstrates that it's possible to write the whole stack with Groovy: Backend, Javascript, HTML, Android, test, build tool.
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Working with Databases & Groovy
Paul King reviews the features in Groovy which make it easy to work with databases - Groovy SQL, datasets -, and working with NoSQL databases such as MongoDB and Neo4J.
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Getting Started with Chrome Extensions: Tips and Tricks
Andrew Dunkman explains the basics of Chrome extension development, how to avoid an extension being automatically disabled when performing upgrades, and some unexpected Chrome hooks.