Gradle Properties - Runtime and Project Configuration: Difference between revisions

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==Property Names==
==Property Names==


Property keys may contain dots.
Property keys may contain dots, but if they do, special precautions should be taken. A property named "my.color" cannot be dereferenced using the simple format:
<syntaxhighlight lang='groovy'>
"color is ${project.my.color}"
</syntaxhighlight>


==Property Values==
==Property Values==

Revision as of 21:50, 13 October 2020

External

Internal

Overview

"Properties" in this context represent external configuration elements passed to a Gradle build to modify the behavior of the Gradle runtime itself, or the behavior of tasks being executed by various projects that are part of the build. Gradle supports many kinds of "properties": configuration can be passed as command line options, system properties, settings.gradle and build.gradle extra properties, gradle.properties file properties and environment variables. All these configuration elements are provided externally and injected into the build and various model object instances.

Gradle Command Line Flags
Gradle System Properties
Gradle Properties
Gradle Environment Variables

It is also possible to define properties, referred to as extra properties, in settings.gradle and build.gradle scripts and pass configuration around between different elements of the build.

Gradle Extra Properties

Since build scripts may include executable code, it is also possible to use local variables, which are a feature of the underlying Groovy language.

Gradle Local Variables

The external configuration and extra properties become part of the state of various objects of the build, such as projects or tasks. The state of build objects can be read from settings.gradle or build.gradle scripts via dedicated accessors.

A project exposes project properties: coordinates such as name, group and version, various other state properties such as the description, path, and externally-configured project properties that come from gradle.properties file hierarchy or -P command line options. More details about accessing the project state and externally-configured properties are available in:

Gradle Project Coordinates, State and Configured Properties

A task also exposes its state (name, description, whether it is enabled or not) through getters and DLS elements.

Property Syntax

Property Names

Property keys may contain dots, but if they do, special precautions should be taken. A property named "my.color" cannot be dereferenced using the simple format:

"color is ${project.my.color}"

Property Values

Declare the value without simple or double quotation marks, it will be handled as a string:

color = red

If simple or double quotation marks are used, they will be considered as part of the string and they will be used verbatim in ${...} dereferences:

"color ${color}"

will be rendered:

"color 'red'"

or

"color \"red\""

TO DEPLETE

Gradle_Variables_and_Properties
Gradle Configuration