Sometimes we will need more than one grab per class, but we can only add
one annotation type per annotatable node. This class allows for multiple
grabs to be added.
For example:
@Grapes([@Grab(module='m1'), @Grab(module='m2')])
class AnnotatedClass { ... }
You can override an implicit transitive dependency by providing an explicit one.
E.g. htmlunit 2.6 normally uses xerces 2.9.1 but you can get 2.9.0 as follows:
@Grapes
([
@Grab
('net.sourceforge.htmlunit:htmlunit:2.6'),
@Grab
('xerces#xercesImpl;2.9.0')
])
Obviously, only do this if you understand the consequences.
You can also remove transitive dependencies altogether (provided you
know you don't need them) using
@GrabExclude
.
For example, here is how we would not grab the
logkit
and
avalon-framework
transitive dependencies for Apache POI:
@Grapes
([
@Grab
("org.apache.poi#poi;3.5-beta6"),
@GrabExclude
("logkit:logkit"),
@GrabExclude
("avalon-framework#avalon-framework")
])
import org.apache.poi.hssf.util.CellReference
assert new CellReference(0, 0, false, false).formatAsString() == 'A1'
assert new CellReference(1, 3).formatAsString() == '$D$2'
It is also sometimes also useful to use
@GrabConfig
to further adjust how dependencies
are grabbed. See
@GrabConfig
for further information.