Paradigm | Object-oriented, scripting |
---|---|
Designed by | JCP |
First appeared | 1999 |
Stable release | 2.1.0
/ December 22, 2020 |
Typing discipline | Dynamic, strong |
Implementation language | Java |
Platform | JVM |
OS | Cross-platform |
License | Apache v2.0, SPL / LGPL (Versions 2.0b4 and earlier)[1][2] |
Website | github |
Influenced by | |
Java, JavaScript, Perl |
BeanShell is a small, free, embeddable Java source interpreter with object scripting language features, written in Java. It runs in the Java Runtime Environment (JRE), dynamically executes standard Java syntax and extends it with common scripting conveniences such as loose types, commands, and method closures, like those in Perl and JavaScript.
While BeanShell allows its users to define functions that can be called from within a script, its underpinning philosophy has been to not pollute its syntax with too many extensions and "syntactic sugar", thereby ensuring that code written for a Java compiler can usually be executed interpretively by BeanShell without any changes and, almost just as much, vice versa. This makes BeanShell a popular testing and debugging tool for the Java virtual machine (JVM) platform.
BeanShell supports scripted objects as simple method closures like those in Perl and JavaScript.
BeanShell is an open source project and has been incorporated into many applications, such as Apache OpenOffice, Apache Ant, WebLogic Server Application Server, Apache JMeter, jEdit, ImageJ, JUMP GIS, Apache Taverna, and many others. BeanShell provides an easy to integrate application programming interface (API). It can also be run in command-line mode or within its own graphical environment.
The first versions of BeanShell (0.96, 1.0) were released by Patrick Niemeyer in 1999, followed by a series of versions. BeanShell 1.3.0 was released in August 2003. Version 2.0b1 was released in September 2003, culminating with version 2.0b4 in May 2005, which as of January 2015 is the newest release posted on the official webpage.[3]
BeanShell has been included in the Linux distribution Debian since 1999.[4]
BeanShell was undergoing standardization through the Java Community Process (JCP) under JSR 274.[5]
Following the JCP approval of the BeanShell JSR Review Ballot in June 2005, no visible activity was taking place around BeanShell.[6] The JSR 274 status is "Dormant".
Since Java 9, Java instead includes JShell, a different read–eval–print loop (REPL) shell based on Java syntax, indicating that BeanShell will not be continued.[7]
A fork of BeanShell, BeanShell2, was created in May 2007 on the now-defunct Google Code Web site.[8] The beanshell2 project has made a number of fixes and enhancements to BeanShell and multiple releases. As of January 2020[update], the latest version of BeanShell2 is v2.1.9, released March 2018.[9] Since the closure of Google Code, the project has been hosted at GitHub.[10]
In December 2012, following a proposal to accept BeanShell as an Apache Incubator project,[11] BeanShell was licensed to The Apache Software Foundation and migrated to the Apache Extras,[12] changing the license to Apache License 2.0. The project was not accepted but instead projected to become part of the Apache Commons at a future time.
Due to changes in the developers' personal circumstances, the BeanShell community did not, however, complete the move to Apache,[13] but remained at Apache Extras. The project has since released BeanShell 2.0b5,[12] which is used by Apache OpenOffice and Apache Taverna.
A Windows automated installer, BeanShell Double-Click,[14] was created in 2013. It includes desktop integration features.
By: Wikipedia.org
Edited: 2021-06-18 09:28:57
Source: Wikipedia.org