While gwt-core and the other refactored modules are intended to be both 
gwt-compatible and j2cl-compatible, there are a small handful of classes 
and methods in those refactored modules that, in their original form, were 
somehow specific to the GWT compiler itself. 

The com.google.gwt.core.client.GWT class is one such class that mostly 
consists of "magic", where there is no java or js implementation of many of 
its members, but those members exist to allow the compiler to rewrite 
certain calls with specific behavior. As such, 
org.gwtproject.core.client.GWT cannot correctly implement all of those 
methods, and throws exceptions where it must fail.

In a case like this, you must call the original method on the 
com.google.gwt class while you still use GWT. If you migrate to j2cl and 
closure, you must find another solution there - j2cl has no split points, 
and closure-compiler doesn't even think of split points in the same way 
that GWT does. So, as long as you continue to use GWT 2, call the 
runAsync() method on the com.google.gwt.core.client.GWT class, and refer to 
https://www.gwtproject.org/doc/latest/DevGuideCodeSplitting.html for more 
guidance.


On Friday, October 4, 2024 at 9:24:54 PM UTC-5 David wrote:

> I use GWT 2.10.
>
> David
>
> On Saturday, October 5, 2024 at 10:18:56 AM UTC+8 David wrote:
>
>> In gwt-core-1.0.0-RC1.jar, I see *"Pick either GWT2 split point or 
>> Closure-Compiler chunks". Where can I find a code splitting SDK?*
>>
>>
>> *David*
>>
>

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