dapper
jabel
dapper | jabel | |
---|---|---|
5 | 9 | |
4 | 790 | |
- | - | |
3.6 | 3.5 | |
over 1 year ago | 2 months ago | |
Java | Java | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
dapper
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Dagger clone with a module info
So I put in the hard work and created dapper, a trimmed-down copy of version 2.37, the last pure-Java version of dagger. I hope it can help with jpms adoption. I also hope I can roughly keep it in sync with a quite active upstream.
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Forking google
You're welcome to try this and make a pull request. Please try with an unassigned issue here.
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Minecraft 1.18 Pre-Release 2: Minecraft 1.18 will require Java 17
Oh, really? What's stopping you? Here's a dagger clone that's fully Java17 compatible. Here's a Java 17 compatible guava clone.
jabel
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What Are Senders Good For, Anyway?
Java has things like Jabel that let you use modern Java syntax and compile down to Java 8 for compatibility reasons.
https://github.com/bsideup/jabel
This is useful commercially, but also nice when building Minecraft mods for older versions of Minecraft.
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How to use different Java versions for src/main/java and src/test/java in Maven
As for Java bytecode, you assume the differences are significant while in reality, they are not, as explained by the Jabel project:
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What can I do with Java 1.4?
(Before realizing it'd already been done)
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What's new in Java 18 for us, developers ?
If you want to use new language features (pattern matching, string templates, records etc.) then I highly recommend to take a look at https://github.com/bsideup/jabel
- Minecraft 1.18 Pre-Release 2: Minecraft 1.18 will require Java 17
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What version should new Java libraries be written in?
I've never heard of somebody sticking to 9 or 10 as their primary JDK. AFAIK most people who could update waited for the 11 LTS. The rest of us are just stuck on 8. But we have some nice tricks.
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Is it possible to any jre under 16 to recognise class ver 60 ?
https://github.com/bsideup/jabel - lets you use new Java syntax, because things like pattern matching are just syntatic sugar and dont change the class file specification
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Eclipse Compiler supports -source 16 -target 8
I've found about the Jabel that tried to enable this feature in the Javac compiler.
- Are there byte code differences between different Java releases?
What are some alternatives?
avaje-inject - Dependency injection via APT (source code generation) ala "Server-Side Dagger DI"
Mixin - Mixin is a trait/mixin and bytecode weaving framework for Java using ASM
maven-jpackage-template - Sample project illustrating building nice, small cross-platform JavaFX or Swing desktop apps with native installers while still using the standard Maven dependency system.
JGroups - The JGroups project
Guava - Google core libraries for Java
Spring - Spring Framework
auto-value
guava - modular guava
UniJ - Universal facade of JDK 9+ API, focused on Collection factory methods
lwjgl - [LEGACY] LWJGL 2.X - The Lightweight Java Game Library.