I’ve promised myself never to use gradlesizeoftheuniverse@programming.dev to Programming@programming.dev – 41 points – 1 years agoandreinc.net24Post a CommentPreviewYou are viewing a single commentView all commentsShow the parent commentAs someone who wants to use Kotlin or Scala, is there another way to get around these two? Coming from .NET or NPM I found both of these to be terrible.The "default" build tool for Scala is sbt.There is Mill https://github.com/com-lihaoyi/mill Which offers a nicer experience than the default Scala build tool: https://www.scala-sbt.org/ I personally like sbt a lot, but I've been told mill is more approachable.
As someone who wants to use Kotlin or Scala, is there another way to get around these two? Coming from .NET or NPM I found both of these to be terrible.The "default" build tool for Scala is sbt.There is Mill https://github.com/com-lihaoyi/mill Which offers a nicer experience than the default Scala build tool: https://www.scala-sbt.org/ I personally like sbt a lot, but I've been told mill is more approachable.
There is Mill https://github.com/com-lihaoyi/mill Which offers a nicer experience than the default Scala build tool: https://www.scala-sbt.org/ I personally like sbt a lot, but I've been told mill is more approachable.
As someone who wants to use Kotlin or Scala, is there another way to get around these two? Coming from .NET or NPM I found both of these to be terrible.
The "default" build tool for Scala is sbt.
There is Mill https://github.com/com-lihaoyi/mill
Which offers a nicer experience than the default Scala build tool: https://www.scala-sbt.org/
I personally like sbt a lot, but I've been told mill is more approachable.