@misc{zhang2024autocoderover,
title={AutoCodeRover: Autonomous Program Improvement},
author={Yuntong Zhang and Haifeng Ruan and Zhiyu Fan and Abhik Roychoudhury},
year={2024},
eprint={2404.05427},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.SE}
}
def sample = ['Groovy', 'Gradle', 'Grails', 'Spock'] as String[]
def result = sample.stream() // Use stream() on array objects
.filter { s -> s.startsWith('Gr') }
.map { s -> s.toUpperCase() }
.toList() // toList() added to Stream by Groovy
URL patterns use an extremely simple syntax. Every character in a pattern must match the corresponding character in the URL path exactly, with two exceptions. At the end of a pattern, /* matches any sequence of characters from that point forward. The pattern *.extension matches any file name ending with extension. No other wildcards are supported, and an asterisk at any other position in the pattern is not a wildcard.
First, the container prefers an exact path match over a wildcard path match. Second, the container prefers to match the longest pattern. Third, the container prefers path matches over filetype matches. Finally, the pattern <url-pattern>/</url-pattern> always matches any request that no other pattern matches
M. Mintz, S. Bills, R. Snow, and D. Jurafsky. Proceedings of the Joint Conference of the 47th Annual Meeting of the ACL and the 4th International Joint Conference on Natural Language Processing of the AFNLP: Volume 2-Volume 2, page 1003--1011. Association for Computational Linguistics, (2009)