As per the documentation here link
To find out which java executable the first one found in your PATH, execute:
which java
This command returns the following three paths in my machine
C:\>which java
C:\Windows\system32\java.EXE
C:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jre7\bin\java.EXE
C:\Windows\System32\java.EXE
There is no java.exe in C:\Windows\System32.
I have java (Java SE 7 Update 25) installed in the location C:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jre7\
This is also confirmed by running "where java"
C:\>where java
C:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jre7\bin\java.exe
I have set Path=C:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jre7\bin;
in environment variables. This path is not used in any environment variable.
What I want to know is, how and why does which java
return C:\Windows\System32\java.EXE
and that too twice?
Since there is no native which
command in Windows, I just found out that a which.exe
had been created to mimic "which" with the following script
@for %%a in (%PATH%) do @if exist %%a\%1 (
for /f %%b in ('dir /b %%a\%1') do @echo %%a\%%b
)
@rem for %a in (%PATH%) do @if exist %a\which* dir /b /w %a\which*
which
command? What is the output ofwhich which
? And what iswhere
? Never heard of useful utilities on Windows. Do you use Cygwin?@for %%a in (%PATH%) do @if exist %%a\%1 ( for /f %%b in ('dir /b %%a\%1') do @echo %%a\%%b ) @rem for %a in (%PATH%) do @if exist %a\which* dir /b /w %a\which*
and "which which" returns a path to this which.exe@rem
is not operative, becauserem
is the comment marker in batch files (i.e. that line is commented out).