Mar 14, 2016 23:43
automatically
Mar 14, 2016 23:43
so gradle will use groovy to compile
Mar 14, 2016 23:43
btw you put it in the groovy directory
Mar 14, 2016 23:43
cu
Mar 14, 2016 23:43
no problem
Mar 14, 2016 23:42
but gradle was using groovy to compile
Mar 14, 2016 23:42
though lombok should work with .groovy as well
Mar 14, 2016 23:41
ah okay makes sense then
Mar 14, 2016 23:41
what did you change?
Mar 14, 2016 23:39
what partof it was groovy?
Mar 14, 2016 23:36
maven repo?
Mar 14, 2016 23:35
only has the sources in it
Mar 14, 2016 23:35
you were using
Mar 14, 2016 23:35
yeah i think its cause thats the sources jar
Mar 14, 2016 23:34
may be the problem
Mar 14, 2016 23:34
hmm, can you remove your constructors?
Mar 14, 2016 23:26
thats how lombok knows to process
Mar 14, 2016 23:26
no @data you need to keep
Mar 14, 2016 23:25
just try a plain class with those methods
Mar 14, 2016 23:25
those also would have to be on the cp
Mar 14, 2016 23:24
and remove your imports for now
Mar 14, 2016 23:24
-cp <your lombok jar>
Mar 14, 2016 23:24
you need it on the classpath
Mar 14, 2016 23:16
if that doesnt work Its definitely a lombok bug
Mar 14, 2016 23:12
did you try running lombok with javac simply?
Mar 14, 2016 23:11
ahoi
Mar 14, 2016 23:09
I mean, check the compiled .class files and see if the methods have been added into them (use a java decompiler or the 'javap' command on it). Compile dependency means it will be included in the produced artifact, this would be provided scope (which you need a plugin for in gradle) though this is unimportant.
Mar 14, 2016 23:09
You should try running lombok in isolation on your class. It is an annotation preprocessor which could interfere with other preprocessors if done incorrectly.
Mar 14, 2016 23:09
Did you check the actual output? Did lombok instrument the classes? Also, lombok is only needed for compilation time not runtime.