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Groovy For Domain-Specific Languages 81

RickJWagner writes "This is a book targeted primarily towards the Java programmer who doesn't yet know Groovy. Groovy is a dynamic scripting language that runs on the JVM and offers easy integration with the Java language. Groovy also offers dynamic language features that lend themselves to the creation of DSLs (Domain-Specific Languages). This book attempts to simultaneously teach the reader how to use Groovy and how to build a DSL." Keep reading for the rest of RickJWagner's review.
Groovy for Domain-Specific Languages
author Fergal Dearle
pages 312
publisher Packt Publishing
rating 7/10
reviewer RickJWagner
ISBN 184719690X
summary a practical tutorial, walking the reader through examples of building DSLs with Groovy covering meta-programming with Groovy
DSLs are something of a hot topic these days. A DSL is a 'Little Language' or a language written just for one business domain. As programmers, we're familiar with DSLs whether we realize it or not-- each time you use 'Make' to build a C project, or use 'Ant' to make a Java project, you're using a DSL. A DSL is a purpose-built language, with it's own verbs, rules, syntax, etc. It's made for one purpose only, and is meant to make things as easy as possible for the intended user. If the user has a need outside what the DSL can provide-- they're just tough out of luck! General purpose languages are for doing whatever the user needs-- DSLs are for doing only one task, but making that one task exceedingly easy for the user.

The book does a good job of making Groovy understandable for a Java coder. Programmers of other stripes would be able to use the book, but the author aimed squarely for the Java sweet spot and I think did a good job of hitting it. Where language integration was to be shown, the JDK was the reciprocal part in the examples, and the classes singled out for interfacing were ones that would be well-known to a Java coder.

Writing DSLs has been done for many years, but was largely an undocumented process until just recently. I think the rise of dynamic languages has something to do with that. Dynamic languages offer some key features that make DSL creation a little easier. A few of these features the book covers are closures and meta-programming. Closures are anonymous methods, packaged in such a way that they can be passed as parameters to other methods. Meta-programming is using code to write other code, and can be used to perform some neat tricks like allowing the user to call methods that don't have a previously written definition. (If that sounds really strange to you, I agree. But it turns out this is something very handy if you're writing a DSL!)

The book is written in a way that thoroughly the breadth of features offered by the Groovy language, but not a lot of depth in all of them. For this reason, I found myself sometimes referring to external sources when I was encountering some language construct that seemed a little less familiar than most. It wasn't a problem-- the book did a fine job of letting me know of the existence of some language feature and how it might be used in writing a DSL. If I didn't immediately grasp the use of the feature after the typical single example of seeing it used in sample code, I'd just pop out to the internet and get a few more examples. The book is nearly 300 pages as it is, and very little of that is wasted. I give the book good grades for technical content.

Style-wise, I found the book reasonable to read but not great. As well as the author does spelling out the nuances of the Groovy language, the DSL parts are interspersed among the chapters and sometimes could be hard to find unless you read a lot of surrounding technical content. Maybe this is the only way to cover two meaty topics at once, I don't know. But I found myself doing quite a bit of paging when I wanted to refer back to DSL-specific advice, sometimes falling back to the chapter-by-chapter summary in the front of the book to get myself in the right neighborhood.

The book has plenty of sample code, which I found well constructed and easy to read. The author adapted the practice of writing small snippets of code, then used assertions to demonstrate the behavior the reader would expect if the code were to be executed. I really liked that. The code itself was always cleanly formatted and minimal in length, which made it very easy to read.

So, did the book hit it's target? I believe it did. The strengths of using Groovy for Domain Specific Languages are drawn out, and the Groovy language is given a thorough overview. Java coders will find this book a reference that will let them start using dynamic features while still staying on the JVM. (By the way, Groovy compiles to Java, so all your existing Java code is usable from Groovy. So you might write an application that's 95% Java and 5% Groovy, and that's just fine with Groovy.) I think this book covered a lot of ground and did it well.

You can purchase Groovy for Domain-Specific Languages from amazon.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.

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Groovy For Domain-Specific Languages

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  • Well, not quite... (Score:5, Informative)

    by macroexp ( 1002893 ) on Thursday July 08, 2010 @01:19PM (#32842142)

    "Writing DSLs has been done for many years, but was largely an undocumented process until just recently."

    Not to discount the review, but that's a bit misleading. There are plenty of books dealing with lex/flex and yacc/bison, which have been used for years to do the same things in a precompiled manner. .Net and Java "just recently" discovered this and have popularized the term DSL for it.

  • Dynamic Languages? (Score:4, Informative)

    by LeotheQuick ( 657964 ) on Thursday July 08, 2010 @01:45PM (#32842500)
    Perhaps a candidate for the latest "revelatory" term. IMHO tailoring languages like Groovy or BSH is a lot of fun and can be pretty easy to do, but it's far from a true "dynamic language". Poster above is right about lex / yacc / bison. Also in the C++ world I can recall reading about boost's "spirit" library. Although I think more of these as "parser generators" (perhaps a less revelatory term), at least that is what they were intended to be. Groovy and BSH are mostly nice cause of how they so cleanly interface with java at runtime (both are capable of resolving references via the classloader). I've always found that using them has been a pretty ugly exercise.
  • by ari_j ( 90255 ) on Thursday July 08, 2010 @03:07PM (#32843448)
    I stopped reading the review when I got to the "largely an undocumented process until just recently" line, as well. The best book on DSLs I've ever seen is On Lisp [paulgraham.com], published in 1993 and available for free from the author. Lisp is almost a meta-DSL - a domain-specific language for the domain of writing domain-specific languages - and this book will get you from "I don't get why the professor is making us write Hello World in Lisp" to thinking in terms of DSLs (and applying that thought process to all programming languages) between its covers.

    You can, of course, write DSLs in any language. But you should learn to do so as a matter of writing DSLs instead of as a language-specific technique. How worthwhile is it to read a book about how to make a linked list specifically in Pascal? Learn how to do the thing in a conceptual sense and then use your knowledge of a language to turn the concept into code.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 08, 2010 @03:57PM (#32843910)

    the simple distinction between it's and its?

    As someone who isn't a native english speaker, I disagree with the "simple" part. Or well, it is simple but it most certainly isn't logical! After a decade of studying english and using it practically daily, I still always need to think a few seconds before writing either "its" or "it's".

BLISS is ignorance.

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