{"author_name":"eller","provider_name":"Hatena Blog","type":"rich","blog_title":"Kengo's blog","width":"100%","blog_url":"https://blog.kengo-toda.jp/","published":"2013-01-30 22:55:19","url":"https://blog.kengo-toda.jp/entry/2013/01/30/225519","categories":["Maven"],"image_url":null,"author_url":"https://blog.hatena.ne.jp/eller/","title":"JUnit with Groovy2 by Maven3","height":"190","description":"Groovy is a good language to code JUnit test cases. Groovy is easy to learn, short to code, and simple to read. Today I changed my pom.xml to use Groovy 2.0 with JUnit 4.11, so I will share my change for you. how to edit your pom.xml What you have to add is not only gmaven-plugin, but also gmaven.ru\u2026","provider_url":"https://hatena.blog","version":"1.0","html":"<iframe src=\"https://hatenablog-parts.com/embed?url=https%3A%2F%2Fblog.kengo-toda.jp%2Fentry%2F2013%2F01%2F30%2F225519\" title=\"JUnit with Groovy2 by Maven3 - Kengo&#39;s blog\" class=\"embed-card embed-blogcard\" scrolling=\"no\" frameborder=\"0\" style=\"display: block; width: 100%; height: 190px; max-width: 500px; margin: 10px 0px;\"></iframe>"}