- in journey test, remove @Ignores so that test runs exercise all tests.
- increase the verbosity of test logging to aide in seeing progress as
tests are un@Ignored and solved.
- saving scripts used to make changes to all exercises. These are the
start of a library of scripts making such changes easier.
- make Gradle output more CI-friendly.
With exercism/exercism.io@54e1df3, we can now gather exercises into a
subdirectory. By separating the language track files from the
configuration and management files, it is easier to read the project.
- move gradle config under "exercises" too as it would make a mess
otherwise.
build: Extract common config to top-level build.gradle
We can inject plugin, repositories and dependencies directly from
the top-level build.gradle.
This extracts a common version of junit for all projects (and
updates anagram to use assertj, the junit matchers did not work
with 4.12).
A straight port of the Ruby tests. The example implementation
uses Joda Time which is generally considered a saner date/time
library than what is built in to Java.
Gradle can be run directly on Mac/Linux/Windows and
auto-download dependencies (much like sbt for Scala),
as well as simplify IDE integration.
Add appropriate .gitignore for this sub-tree.
For developers, to add a new exercism:
cp -r _template new-exercism
# create test in new-exercism/src/test/java/SampleTest.java
git add new-exercism
Users will be able to just run "./gradlew check" to run tests.