# This doesn't need to be false, and some projects may be able to take advantage of setting daemon to true. # We set it to false by default in order to avoid too many daemons from being created and persisting; each needs RAM. org.gradle.daemon=false # Sets starting memory usage to 512MB, maximum memory usage to 1GB, and tries to set as much to use Unicode as we can. org.gradle.jvmargs=-Xms512M -Xmx1G -Dfile.encoding=UTF-8 -Dconsole.encoding=UTF-8 # "Configure on-demand" must be false because it breaks projects that have Android modules. The default is also false. org.gradle.configureondemand=false # The logging level determines which messages get shown about how Gradle itself is working, such as if build.gradle # files are fully future-proof (which they never are, because Gradle constantly deprecates working APIs). # You can change 'quiet' below to 'lifecycle' to use Gradle's default behavior, which shows some confusing messages. # You could instead change 'quiet' below to 'info' to see info that's important mainly while debugging build files. # Note that if you want to use Gradle Build Scans, you should set the below logging level to 'lifecycle', otherwise # the link to the scan won't get shown at all. # Documented at: https://docs.gradle.org/current/userguide/command_line_interface.html#sec:command_line_logging org.gradle.logging.level=quiet gdxControllersVersion=2.2.4 enableGraalNative=false graalHelperVersion=2.0.1 gdxVersion=1.14.0 projectVersion=0.0.1