The $@ option in bash doesn't make sense to come before `generate`
because the only option we can pass before generate cli usage is `help`.
System properties can be passed via JAVA_OPTS, so there's not really a
need for any intermediaries in the command line construction.
Having $@ at the end of the arguments list allows maintainers and users
inspecting options to quickly pass new options to a script. For example,
```
./bin/aspnetcore-petstore.sh --additional-properties sourceFolder=asdf
```
For command line arguments that may appear more than once in the
arguments list, this change doesn't provide any rules about overwriting
values that may exist (hard-coded) in the script. That is, in the
example above, if aspnetcore-petstore.sh already includes the
sourceFolder set to a different value, the "winning" value is up to the
options parser and openapi-generator-cli implementation.
* Rest-assured http client has been added
ApiClient has been added
@Deprecated has been added for operation
{{{returnType}}} has been fixed
build.gradle.mustache, build.sbt.mustache, api_doc_mustache has been added
Samples has been added for rest-assured
Useless supporting files has been removed for rest-assured
Sample has been added for rest-assured
* Tests has been added
* Doc and tests has been fixed, JSON.mustache moved to common