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Thinking that the answer to this is pretty obvious but here it goes:

When I am working on a small project for school (in java) I compile it.

On my coop we are using ant to build our project.

I think that compiling is a subset of building. Is this correct? What is the difference between building and compiling?

Related:
What is the difference between compiling and building?

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8 Answers 8

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The "Build" is a process that covers all the steps required to create a "deliverable" of your software. In the Java world, this typically includes:

  1. Generating sources (sometimes).
  2. Compiling sources.
  3. Compiling test sources.
  4. Executing tests (unit tests, integration tests, etc).
  5. Packaging (into jar, war, ejb-jar, ear).
  6. Running health checks (static analyzers like Checkstyle, Findbugs, PMD, test coverage, etc).
  7. Generating reports.

So as you can see, compiling is only a (small) part of the build (and the best practice is to fully automate all the steps with tools like Maven or Ant and to run the build continuously which is known as Continuous Integration).

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  • 7
    Why call it "Continuous Integration" instead of "Continuous Building"? Jun 18, 2016 at 22:57
  • @Pascal, Re "run the build continuously".. "the build" refers to?
    – Pacerier
    Aug 3, 2016 at 20:54
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    @Pacerier "the build" refers to all steps 1.-7.; "continuously" doesn't mean you start next build immediately after first one finishes but only on changes in project.
    – michelek
    Oct 3, 2017 at 7:13
  • and when it generate sources as you mention in the 1st point (Generating sources (sometimes).) Jul 15, 2018 at 9:12
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    @QuaziIrfan Because you are verifying that your new, or updated, code integrates with the existing code base. That is, that your changes compile, that they comply with the team's coding standards and requirements, that its basic functionality is good, and that they don't break the current good build. In other words, that your updates integrate well with the existing code base. HTH
    – Rob Wells
    Oct 26, 2020 at 17:40
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Some of the answers I see here are out-of-context and make more sense if this were a C/C++ question.

Short version:

  • "Compiling" is turning .java files into .class files
  • 'Building" is a generic term that includes compiling and other tasks.

"Building" is a generic term describes the overall process which includes compiling. For example, the build process might include tools which generate Java code or documentation files.

Often there will be additional phases, like "package" which takes all your .class files and puts them into a .jar, or "clean" which cleans out .class files and temporary directories.

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Compiling is the act of turning source code into object code.

Linking is the act of combining object code with libraries into a raw executable.

Building is the sequence composed of compiling and linking, with possibly other tasks such as installer creation.

Many compilers handle the linking step automatically after compiling source code.

What is the difference between compile code and executable code?

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  • Some other possible tasks: enhancing (JDO), Javadoc-ing, packaging, and signing. In addition, some environments including running automated unit/regression tests as part of a "build".
    – Bert F
    Apr 16, 2010 at 3:32
  • Normally, there is no linking step when building Java projects, and no raw executable is produced. Rather, the compiled classes are packaged together into a .jar file as part of the build. (Or .war, or .ear, depending on your target environment.)
    – markusk
    Apr 16, 2010 at 5:12
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    what are "raw executable"?
    – ealeon
    Jul 23, 2013 at 18:15
  • The bag of bits that is basically useless on it's own without being mixed in with the other libraries it needs. It's much like a chocolate cake. Without the flour and eggs, etc, the cocoa is just raw cocoa.
    – Kaili
    Jul 31, 2013 at 19:45
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In simple words

Compilation translates java code (human readable) into bytecode, so the Virtual machine understands it.

Building puts all the compiled parts together and creates (builds) an executable.

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    What you're talking about is "Interpretation" ... compiling is turning the human readable code into machine code
    – mortsahl
    Nov 10, 2014 at 18:02
  • @Tom, You mean an "executable" or "jar executable"?
    – Pacerier
    Aug 3, 2016 at 20:59
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  • Build is a compiled version of a program.
  • Compile means, convert (a program) into a machine-code or lower-level form in which the program can be executed.

In Java: Build is a Life cycle contains sequence of named phases.

for example: maven it has three build life cycles, the following one is default build life cycle.

◾validate - validate the project is correct and all necessary information is available
◾compile - compile the source code of the project
◾test - test the compiled source code using a suitable unit testing framework. These tests should not require the code be packaged or deployed
◾package - take the compiled code and package it in its distributable format, such as a JAR.
◾integration-test - process and deploy the package if necessary into an environment where integration tests can be run
◾verify - run any checks to verify the package is valid and meets quality criteria
◾install - install the package into the local repository, for use as a dependency in other projects locally
◾deploy - done in an integration or release environment, copies the final package to the remote repository for sharing with other developers and projects.
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Actually you are doing the same thing. Ant is build system based on XML configuration files that can do a wide range of tasks related to compiling software. Compiling your java code is just one of those tasks. There are many others such as copying files around, configuring servers, assembling zips and jars, and compiling other languages such as C.

You don't need Ant to compile your software. You can do it manually as you are doing at school. Another alternative to Ant is a product called Maven. Both Ant and Maven do the same thing , but in quite different ways.

Lookup Ant and Maven for more details.

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  • You can also see what ant is actually doing by looking the buildfile (most likely called build.xml). Even if you're not familiar with the syntax, you can kind of see what's going on. <javac> means it's compiling some Java code. <java> means it's actually running the compiled code. Probably it's creating a directory to put the .class files in, compiling the code, maybe creating some Javadoc, etc.
    – Tyler
    Apr 16, 2010 at 4:57
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In Eclipse and IntelliJ, the build process consist of the following steps: cleaning the previous packages, validate, compile, test, package,
integration, verify, install, deploy.

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Compiling is just converting the source code to binary, building is compiling and linking any other files needed into the build directory

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