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Posted to notifications@groovy.apache.org by "Rémy Letient (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2018/02/10 17:41:00 UTC
[jira] [Comment Edited] (GROOVY-8475) CLONE - I am unable to
instantiate objects using the "new" keyword
[ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GROOVY-8475?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16359552#comment-16359552 ]
Rémy Letient edited comment on GROOVY-8475 at 2/10/18 5:40 PM:
---------------------------------------------------------------
I'm cloned the original issu because it still.
I'm with ubuntu 16 and Groovy 2.4.0, 2.4.13, 2.4.12
With the Groovy 2.3.7 that works.
was (Author: jwillow):
I'm cloned the original issu because it still.
I'm with ubuntu 17.03 and Groovy 2.4.0, 2.4.13, 2.4.12
With the Groovy 2.3.7 that works.
> CLONE - I am unable to instantiate objects using the "new" keyword
> ------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: GROOVY-8475
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GROOVY-8475
> Project: Groovy
> Issue Type: Bug
> Components: Groovysh
> Affects Versions: 2.4.0, 2.4.12, 2.4.13
> Environment: Linux - Debian jessie/sid 64 bits
> Linux - Ubuntu 16 64 bits
> Reporter: Rémy Letient
> Priority: Major
> Attachments: image-2018-02-10-18-36-27-122.png, testA.groovy
>
>
> I am embedding Groovysh in a java application. After some tests, I realized that the "new" keyword seems to not work in the last groovysh version. When I try to do:
> a = new A()
> I obtain: "unable to resolve class A"
> This is an example:
> groovy:000> class A {
> class A {
> groovy:001> public A() {
> public A() {
> groovy:002> name = "default"
> name = "default"
> groovy:003> }
> }
> groovy:004> String name;
> String name;
> groovy:005> }
> }
> ===> true
> groovy:000> a = new A()
> a = new A()
> ERROR org.codehaus.groovy.control.MultipleCompilationErrorsException:
> startup failed:
> script14159599676571305654112.groovy: 1: unable to resolve class A
> @ line 1, column 5.
> a = new A()
> ^
> 1 error
> However, if I use the newInstance method it works:
> groovy:000> a = A.newInstance()
> a = A.newInstance()
> ===> A@2154cecb
> I tested the same code in the previous version (2.3.7) and it works
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