CLASSPATH tells Java where to search for programs
Where to look? The Java runtime system needs to know where to find programs that you want to run and libraries that are needed. It knows where the predefined Java packages are, but if you are using additional packages, you must tell specify where they are located.
CLASSPATH. Specifying where to search for additional libraries in Windows is easily done by seeting the environment variable CLASSPATH, which Java uses to see where it should find Java programs and libraries.
Automatic? Some IDEs tell the Java runtime system where to search, and double-clickable Jar (Java Archive) files don't have this problem
When do you need it? If you compile "by hand" (typing
javac
and java
in a command window), or sometimes with TextPad or other editors.Setting CLASSPATH on Windows XP
The CLASSPATH variable can be set on Windows XP with the following steps.
- Click the
Start
button in the lower left of the screen. - Select
Control Panel
from the pop-up menu. - Choose
System
from the submenu. - Click the
Advanced
tab. - Click the
Environment Variables
button near the bottom and you will see two lists of variables. - Look in the
System variables
list for a variable namedCLASSPATH
. If you find it, clickEdit
. If you don't find it, clickNew
and enterCLASSPATH
in theVariable name
field. - The
Variable value
field is a list of file paths of directories orjar
files. The first thing in this list should be the current directory, which is represented in windows just as it is in Unix, as a single period. If there's more than one thing in this list, separate items with a semicolon. For example, my CLASSPATH variable starts with these three items (there are a couple more, but this should be enough to give you the idea). The only part you need is the first "dot"..;C:\classpath\com.fredswartz.ezgui.jar;c:\classpath\TableLayout.jar;
I put extra libraries that I want to be searched in a directory namedclasspath
, but you can choose any name.
Problems? Setting the CLASSPATH environment variable can make life much more convenient, but it can also create huge problems when testing different versions of programs that are on your classpath.
IDE. Now that I do most of my development using NetBeans, where I can specify which jar files to include, I no longer modify my CLASSPATH variable.