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Posted to notifications@groovy.apache.org by "André Filipe Aloise (Jira)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2020/11/13 13:22:00 UTC

[jira] [Created] (GROOVY-9815) Object not bound with Groovy (but works fine in Java)

André Filipe Aloise created GROOVY-9815:
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             Summary: Object not bound with Groovy (but works fine in Java)
                 Key: GROOVY-9815
                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GROOVY-9815
             Project: Groovy
          Issue Type: Bug
    Affects Versions: 3.0.6
         Environment: OS: Windows 10
AdoptJDK Hotspot 1.8.0.272
            Reporter: André Filipe Aloise


Consider the following reproducer:

 

[https://github.com/ptomaszek/vertx-groovy]

 

As it can be seen, there are two main classes: one with Groovy and one with Java. Both of them are simple reproducers of Vert.x Promises. When an object of Promisse calls it's future() method, it seems to create a new Future instance everytime, instead of just returning the existing one.

 

The code within the reproducer has similar codes in Groovy and Java. When MainJava runs, it prints true, which is the expected behaviour. When MainGroovy runs, it prints false unless the class is annotated with @CompileStatic.

 

Another reproducer is [https://github.com/tienquanutc/vertx-promise-groovy-bug] . This one also has two classes with similar codes. As promise.future() gets called four times, JMain classes prints 1 which is ok, but GMain prints 4. This one also works as expected with Groovy using @CompileStatic.

 

This can be related to the fact that Promise and Future share the same implementation ([https://github.com/eclipse-vertx/vert.x/tree/3.9/src/main/java/io/vertx/core)]. Apparently when Groovy resolves the future() method call dynamically, it invokes the Future.future() static method instead of the instance Promise.future() method.

 

There's also some healthy discussion here https://github.com/vert-x3/vertx-lang-groovy/issues/113

 

I don't think it's a bug with Vert.x, since the code with Java works correctly.



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