In my role as a Developer Advocate, working with the variety of APIs and Libraries we offer - I have to often switch from Python to Java, to REST APIs several times a day. However, as you may have gathered from my other articles, like many of my fellow Dev Advocates and others in the wider developer community, I am trying to standardise all my (non-C++) development using Visual Studio Code. Previously, I would set up an Eclipse project by adding the source code, libraries etc and more recently I experimented with using the Gradle script with Eclipse. trying to re-create a customer scenario/solution by making lots of small changes to an example and re-running the example after each change.like to learn about an API by exploring the examples - making minor changes and re-running them to observe the impact.If you prefer using IDEs to the command line.However, the above is not ideal for the following scenarios: This approach is fine if you prefer the command line and/or are just running some examples without making any code changes. Gradlew runconsumer450 -args="-username -password -clientId " Generally, these instructions talk about using the command line to initiate the various actions - e.g. Once you install the Refinitiv Real-Time SDK and refer to the QuickStart page or the Installation guide, they explain how you can use Gradle to build and run the examples. Starting with Refinitiv Real-Time SDK Java v1.2, Refinitiv started using Gradle to build and run the RT-SDK examples. An easy way to edit and test RT-SDK Java examplesĪccording to the Gradle documentation page, it is ' an open-source build automation tool that is designed to be flexible enough to build almost any type of software'
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