JSweet version 2.0.0 has been released

September 1, 2017 at 10:15 am by Renaud Pawlak

We are pleased to announce that JSweet 2 is now available.

JSweet 2 is the outcome of several months of intense work with several partners that have been using JSweet for different purposes. It brings to you major improvements in the way you can transpile your Java code to JavaScript. Here are the main changes:

More interoperability with JavaScript. By default the generated code gets rid of Java APIs and uses pure JavaScript objects (for instance Java lists and maps will translate to pure JavaScript arrays/objects). No Java runtime is required anymore (on contrary to other Java to JavaScript transpilers) and your JSweet APIs can be used as is by JavaScript and TypeScript programs. JSweet even translates Javadoc comments to JSDoc for full API support. Try it.

By default the generated code gets rid of Java APIs and uses pure JavaScript objects (for instance Java lists and maps will translate to pure JavaScript arrays/objects). No Java runtime is required anymore (on contrary to other Java to JavaScript transpilers) and your JSweet APIs can be used as is by JavaScript and TypeScript programs. JSweet even translates Javadoc comments to JSDoc for full API support. Try it. Support for tuning and extending the transpiler. With JSweet 2, there are several ways to tune/extend the generated code: Java annotations, configuration file, or through the JSweet transpiler extension API. In short, JSweet is now an open transpiler , which means it can be easily extended/adapted, as fully explained here. Also check out the small example right below.

With JSweet 2, there are several ways to tune/extend the generated code: Java annotations, configuration file, or through the JSweet transpiler extension API. In short, JSweet is now an , which means it can be easily extended/adapted, as fully explained here. Also check out the small example right below. Much improvements to bridge external JavaScript libraries. With JSweet 2, it becomes really easy to write your own candies (a.k.a. bridges). First, you can write definitions on-the-fly in your program within the def package. With the candy generator tool, you can translate the TypeScript definitions and get a first Java version, which you can modify for your own purpose, and share with the community in the jsweet-candies organization.

With JSweet 2, it becomes really easy to write your own candies (a.k.a. bridges). First, you can write definitions on-the-fly in your program within the package. With the candy generator tool, you can translate the TypeScript definitions and get a first Java version, which you can modify for your own purpose, and share with the community in the jsweet-candies organization. More extensive support for Java (semantics and core APIs). Partial and extensible support for many Java APIs such as java.io , java.lang.reflect , or java.math , is now built-in or easy to plug in with the extension API.

Example

For the sake illustrating new JSweet v2 brand new power, let us say your Java program uses java.util.Date objects. By default, JSweet translates java.util.Date objects to JavaScript dates. However, for your context (and some personal reasons), you may want to translate dates to strings. With JSweet 2, you can simply use the extension API to write an adapter that will map the java.util.Date type to the TypeScript string type. It is as simple as this (see the complete example here):

public class HelloWorldAdapter extends org.jsweet.transpiler.extension.PrinterAdapter { public HelloWorldAdapter(PrinterAdapter parent) { super(parent); addTypeMapping(java.util.Date.class.getName(), "string"); } }

Know more / get involved

For more details and secondary features, please read the release notes.

We hope to keep in touch with you soon and plan to post some real-world success stories about using JSweet. Don’t hesitate to contact us in the meantime if you have any questions.