Groovy - closures vs methods - the difference

Alexander Mills picture Alexander Mills · Feb 20, 2014 · Viewed 10.3k times · Source

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If you look very carefully at the picture included, you will notice that you can refactor Groovy code using the Eclipse IDE and convert a method to a closure and vice versa. So, what exactly is a closure again and how is it different than a method? Can someone give a good example of using a closure as well as why it's a useful feature? Anonymous inner classes weren't good enough?

Answer

Seagull picture Seagull · Feb 20, 2014

Closure is a Closure class instance, that implements Call logic. It may be passed as argument or assigned to a variable. It also has some logic concerned with scope variable accessing and delegating calls.

Methods are normal Java methods. Nothing special.

And yes, anonymous inner classes have a lot of boilerplate code to perform simple actions.

Compare:

button.addActionListener(
  new ActionListener() {
     public void actionPerformed( ActionEvent e ) {
          frame.dispose();
     }
  }
);

vs

button.addActionListener { frame.dispose() }

There is a related question on SO Groovy : Closures or Methods and the following link(s) to the user guide containing a lot of useful information.

  1. http://groovy-lang.org/closures.html

A closure in Groovy is an open, anonymous, block of code that can take arguments, return a value and be assigned to a variable. A closure may reference variables declared in its surrounding scope. In opposition to the formal definition of a closure, Closure in the Groovy language can also contain free variables which are defined outside of its surrounding scope. While breaking the formal concept of a closure, it offers a variety of advantages which are described in this chapter.