Groovy Shell
The Groovy Shell, aka. groovysh is a command-line application which allows easy access to evaluate Groovy expressions, define classes and run simple experiments.
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This page pertains to the new NEWSHELL=true ./bin/groovysh |
Features
- No need for
gocommand to execute buffer. - Rich cross-platform edit-line editing, history and completion thanks to JLine.
- ANSI colors (prompt, exception traces, etc).
- Simple, yet robust, command system with online help, user alias support and more.
- User profile support
Command-line Options and Arguments
The shell supports several options to control verbosity, ANSI coloring and other features.
./bin/groovysh --help usage: groovysh [options] [...] -C, --color[=FLAG] Enable or disable use of ANSI colors -D, --define=NAME=VALUE Define a system property -T, --terminal=TYPE Specify the terminal TYPE to use -V, --version Display the version -d, --debug Enable debug output -h, --help Display this help message -q, --quiet Suppress superfluous output -v, --verbose Enable verbose output
In addition to options, commands or expressions can be given on the command-line which will invoke the shell in non-interactive mode. The commands or expressions will be evaluated and the shell will exit.
./bin/groovysh 'show preferences' No preferences are set
./bin/groovysh 'System.properties.each { k, v -> println("$k = $v") }'
java.runtime.name = Java(TM) 2 Runtime Environment, Standard Edition
sun.boot.library.path = /System/Library/Frameworks/JavaVM.framework/Versions/1.5.0/Libraries
java.vm.version = 1.5.0_07-87
awt.nativeDoubleBuffering = true
gopherProxySet = false
...
Commands
The shell has a number of different commands, which provide rich access to the shell's environment.
Commands all have a name and a shortcut (which is something like \h). Commands may also have some predefined system aliases. Users may also create their own aliases.
Recognized Commands
help, \h, ?, ?
exit
import
display
clear
show
inspect
purge
edit
load
save
history
alias
set
Preferences
Some of aspects of groovysh behaviors can be customized by setting preferences. Preferences are set using the set command or the \= shortcut.
Recognized Preferences
verbosity
Set the shell's verbosity level. Expected to be one of:
DEBUGVERBOSEINFOQUIET
Default is INFO.
If this preference is set to an invalid value, then the previous setting will be used, or if there is none, then the preference is removed and the default is used.
show-last-result
Show the last result after an execution.
Default is true.
sanitize-stack-trace
Sanitize (trim-down/filter) stack traces.
Default is true.
Setting a Preference
set verbosity DEBUG
Listing Set Preferences
show preferences
Clearing Preferences (ie. Resetting to Defaults)
purge preferences
Screen Shots
These shots have been taken over the development of the new shell, so some of the content might look slightly different.


