0

I have 3 different JDK installed on my computer, what environment-variable should I set to make javac use jdk 1.5, if I type java -version, it gives 1.7

please, clarify me a bit, how do those correlate, e.g if java -version says 1.7, does it mean that javac is going to use java 1.5, and which variable should I change to make things different

UPDATE: I want to change the behaviour of javac, how do I make javac to call 1.5 compiler? WITHOUT ANY keys added, I need it to be default, what variables do I need to change

WINDOWS

0

3 Answers 3

1

if you are in *unix system, just found which javac you use:

which javac

and which java you use:

which java

if you use a JAVA_HOME in your path, just put the JAVA_HONE/bin at the beginning of the PATH

0

The compiler is part of the JDK, you have to call the appropriate compiler for the JDK version you want to use.

For example if you have:

/jdk1 /jdk2 /jdk3

then you would need to reference the javac compiler in the bin folder of the appropriate JDK, e.g. . /jdk2/bin/javac.

You are likely just typing javac and therefore calling whichever is on the path.

0

You can call your 7 compiler with different compile options to compile into previous versions. Try

javac -source 1.5 <source>

See here

1
  • To be clear, this will produce code compatible for running on a v5 jre, not call the v5 compiler.
    – codeghost
    Jan 23, 2013 at 13:43

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.