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jeroenmols.com | ||
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blog.omega-prime.co.uk
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| | | | | I recently released my first open source library for Java, MDBI. I learnt a lot about the Java open-source ecosystem as part of this process, and this blog summarises that in the hope that it will be useful to others. Specifically, the post will explain how to set up a project using the modern Gradle build system to build code and deploy it to the standard Maven Central repository from the command line really easily. | |
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www.marcogomiero.com
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| | | | | Update - February 2021 As you may have heard, JCenter is shutting down in May 2021. Into the Sunset on May 1st: Bintray, JCenter, GoCenter, and ChartCenter https://jfrog.com/blog/into-the-sunset-bintray-jcenter-gocenter-and-chartcenter/ So, this tutorial is no longer recommended because it explains how to publish an Android library to JCenter. I suggested you follow this guide written by Márton Braun. Publishing Android libraries to MavenCentral in 2021 https://getstream.io/blog/publishing-libraries-to-mavencentral-2021/ If you have already published a library on JCenter and you want to migrate the old artifacts to MavenCentral, you can follow the guide that I've written: | |
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prashamhtrivedi.in
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| | | | | Sharing code from Private libraries is a difficult task. In this post we will see how we can use BitBucket as Private Maven Repository. | |
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lucasr.org
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| | | Up until now, Probe relied on dynamic view proxies generated at runtime to intercept View calls. Although very convenient, this approach greatly affects the time to inflate your layouts-which limits the number of use cases for the library, especially in more complex apps. | ||