[GRADLE-1861] GUI silently ignores task arguments in invocatoin Created: 22/Oct/11 Updated: 16/Jan/17 Resolved: 16/Jan/17 |
|
Status: | Resolved |
Project: | Gradle |
Affects Version/s: | 1.0-milestone-3 |
Fix Version/s: | None |
Type: | Bug | ||
Reporter: | Blaine Simpson | Assignee: | Unassigned |
Resolution: | Won't Fix | Votes: | 1 |
Description |
Behavior when "gradle --gui task1 task2" is run does not behave as the Gradle syntax message and the user guide describe: USAGE: gradle [option...] [task...] I think it would be more user friendly if "gradle --gui task1 task2" would start up the Gui and execute task1 and task2 either before, after, or instead-of, the default tasks task that it normally executes upon startup. I can understand if you think it better for "gradle --gui" to not accept task parameters, but it is just wrong to accept the task parameters without complaint or warning and ignore them. For a casual user running "gradle --gui aQuietTask", they can not tell that their quiet task has not in fact run. Either gradle --gui should
|
Comments |
Comment by Aaron J. Zirbes [ 26/Dec/12 ] |
I'd prefer the option:
|
Comment by Benjamin Muschko [ 15/Nov/16 ] |
As announced on the Gradle blog we are planning to completely migrate issues from JIRA to GitHub. We intend to prioritize issues that are actionable and impactful while working more closely with the community. Many of our JIRA issues are inactionable or irrelevant. We would like to request your help to ensure we can appropriately prioritize JIRA issues you’ve contributed to. Please confirm that you still advocate for your JIRA issue before December 10th, 2016 by:
We look forward to collaborating with you more closely on GitHub. Thank you for your contribution to Gradle! |
Comment by Blaine Simpson [ 15/Nov/16 ] |
Behavior like this is very non-intuitive and hence un-groovy. |
Comment by Benjamin Muschko [ 16/Jan/17 ] |
The Gradle GUI has been deprecated and is scheduled to be removed with Gradle 4.0. We are not going to work on this issue anymore. |