138

I have an existing project that uses @Override on methods that override interface methods, rather than superclass methods. I cannot alter this in code, but I would like Eclpse to stop complaining about the annotation, as I can still build with Maven.

How would I go about disabling this error?

Note: Due to project requirements, I need to compile for Java 1.5.

2
  • But it seems the source is targeted to Java 6?
    – akarnokd
    Jun 12, 2009 at 17:55
  • Indeed. Java 5 was a late requirement for mac support. Jun 12, 2009 at 17:57

10 Answers 10

272

Using the @Override annotation on methods that implement those declared by an interface is only valid from Java 6 onward. It's an error in Java 5.

Make sure that your IDE projects are setup to use a Java 6 JRE, and that the "source compatibility" is set to 1.6 or greater:

  1. Open the Window > Preferences dialog
  2. Browse to Java > Compiler.
  3. There, set the "Compiler compliance level" to 1.6.

Remember that Eclipse can override these global settings for a specific project, so check those too.


Update:

The error under Java 5 isn't just with Eclipse; using javac directly from the command line will give you the same error. It is not valid Java 5 source code.

However, you can specify the -target 1.5 option to JDK 6's javac, which will produce a Java 5 version class file from the Java 6 source code.

10
  • No, it won't. It will produce an error message "javac: source release 1.6 requires target release 1.6". Jun 12, 2009 at 18:07
  • 9
    No, it won't. It will produce a compiled class file. It only gives that error if you specify the -source 1.6 option, which isn't necessary to make this work.
    – erickson
    Jun 12, 2009 at 18:20
  • You know, since I build manually anyway, I can just leave the source level at 1.6. I could not get any sort of mixed configuration working, and this seems simplest. Jun 12, 2009 at 18:32
  • @erickson does the -target -source downgrade works for 1.7 to 1.6 too? stackoverflow.com/q/8869869/632951
    – Pacerier
    Jan 18, 2012 at 15:32
  • This doesn't seem to work with the 1.8 JDK. -source 1.6 -target 1.5 says: javac: source release 1.6 requires target release 1.6
    – Don Hatch
    Jul 3, 2016 at 0:59
41

Do as follows:

Project -> Properties -> java compiler ->

  • Enable project specific settings - 'yes'
  • Compiler compliance - 1.6
  • generated class files and source compatibility - 1.5
2
  • Thanks - didn't realise each project also has it's own settings Dec 3, 2012 at 9:35
  • 2
    in my case I needed to disable this option. Oct 15, 2014 at 18:28
12

Check also if the project has facet. The java version may be overriden there.

1
  • 1
    Score! You were right, my project facet was overriding global compliance settings. Thanks!
    – bpawlowski
    Mar 14, 2014 at 9:12
9

Project specific settings may be enabled. Select your project Project > Properties > Java Compiler, uncheck the Enable project specific settings or change Jdk 1.6 and above not forgetting the corresponding JRE.
Incase it does not work, remove your project from eclipse, delete .settings folders, .project, .classpath files. clean and build the project, import it back into eclipse and then reset your Java compiler. Clean and build your projectand eclipse. It worked for me

8

You could change the compiler settings to accept Java 6 syntax but generate Java 5 output (as I remember). And set the "Generated class files compatibility" a bit lower if needed by your runtime. Update: I checked Eclipse, but it complains if I set source compatibility to 1.6 and class compatibility to 1.5. If 1.6 is not allowed I usually manually comment out the offending @Override annotations in the source (which doesn't help your case).

Update2: If you do only manual build, you could write a small program which copies the original project into a new one, strips @Override annotations from the java sources and you just hit Clean project in Eclipse.

4
  • Can you provide any specifics? Jun 12, 2009 at 17:41
  • It is on the same page as stated by erickson.
    – akarnokd
    Jun 12, 2009 at 17:45
  • The project is several GB large. A simple "copy" isn't even practical. :/ Jun 12, 2009 at 18:14
  • In this case, you'll need to ask for change permission. Or create a branch for the 1.5 compatible sources and manually fix the java files.
    – akarnokd
    Jun 12, 2009 at 18:25
1

You can also try Retroweaver to create the Java5 version from Java6 classes.

1

Use Eclipse to search and replace (remove) all instances of "@Override". Then add back the non-interface overrides using "Clean Up".

Steps:

  1. Select the projects or folders containing your source files.
  2. Go to "Search > Search..." (Ctrl-H) to bring up the Search dialog.
  3. Go to the "File Search" tab.
  4. Enter "@Override" in "Containing text" and "*.java" in "File name patterns". Click "Replace...", then "OK", to remove all instances of "@Override".
  5. Go to "Window > Preferences > Java > Code Style > Clean Up" and create a new profile.
  6. Edit the profile, and uncheck everything except "Missing Code > Add missing Annotations > @Override". Make sure "Implementations of interface methods" is unchecked.
  7. Select the projects or folders containing your source files.
  8. Select "Source > Clean Up..." (Alt+Shift+s, then u), then "Finish" to add back the non-interface overrides.
0

I understood your problem, change your jdk from your jdk to greaterthan 1.5

0

By configuring that the IDE projects are setup to use a Java 6 JRE or above sometimes does not remove the eclipse error. For me a restart of the Eclipe IDE helped.

0

Even after changing the compiler compliance setting to 1.6 or 1.7 from windows tab, then prefernces, then java, then compiler and setting the compiler compliance, I was still having this issue. The idea is that we need to go the the project folder, right click, Java and set compiler compliance to 1.6 or higer. This worked for me.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.