How to configure java setting for my new project? - java

I have started learning algorithm in java, but there are lot of things getting in my way unlike python or ruby. I wanted to well structure my source code for future references, here is my directory structure.
~/workspace/algorithms/
|---searching/BinarySearch.java
|---sorting/InsertionSort.java
The InsertionSort.java file consists of this package:
package algorithms.sorting;
class InsertionSort {...}
I am able to compile my java source but I am having trouble running the program. I may also need to import code from any package inside algorithms to any package.
How to compile and run programs keeping my package structure intact from vim or command line? what should be my current directory while running commands?
PS: I am a vim user and don't want to abandon it just for the sake of Java.

Your classpath should point to ~/workspace. Then on the command line enter:
> java algorithms.sorting.InsertionSort
This will call the main() method of your InsertionSort class.

Related

How to compile and run java programs ignoring package info?

I have a pile of .java files. They all have the same class name public MyClass. They all have a main method. They all may or may not have a package declaration at top, and I do not know ahead of time.
I am trying to write a script to compile and run these java programs. This is easy for the files without the package declaration... I just do some cp operations to setup, javac MyClass.java and java MyClass, then rm to teardown. However, the files with the package declaration require special attention. I have a few options that occur to me, including deleting the package lines, or attempting to read the package lines so that I know what the resulting directory structure should be. Both of these require me to go parsing through the .java files, which makes me sad.
Is there a way to compile and run these files without having to parse the .java files? Something like:
javac --ignore_package_structure MyClass.java
would be ideal, but a quick look at the javac man pages suggests that such a thing doesn't exist.
If we can assume that each student submits a single source file named HelloWorld.java, then we can use the "Launch Single-File Source-Code Programs" feature added by JEP 330 in Java 11:
java HelloWorld.java
We don't run javac first, we don't get a .class file (no cleanup needed), and any package declaration is handled automatically.
Remember, the students are still allowed to use many classes, they just all have to be submitted to you in a single source file.
The name of the class doesn't even matter. The first class in the source file is executed.
There isn't any easy way to do this. You could use regex though, and replace all imports with this simple java regex:
"package \w+;"g
Simply stated, you create a Java program to replace all the package names.
How to replace files: Find and replace words/lines in a file

Why do I need to delete the package line to run Java outside of NetBeans?

So I'm completely new to programming, and I've been writing some Java with the NetBeans IDE. My code runs fine within NetBeans, but I've tried to run it using the command line as well. However, if I run it from the command line, I have to delete the line:
package firstprogram;
which NetBeans automatically places at the top of each new file, or I get the error:
Error: Could not find or load main class FirstProgram
However, if I do delete the line, then the program no longer runs within NetBeans! It doesn't seem right that I have to choose whether to run a .java from within NetBeans or without.
The research I've done makes me think that this is something to do with directory structure? But everything I read on that goes straight over my head. NetBeans has a structure with "build", "dist", "nbproject", and "src", but when I use the command line I just place the .java file in an empty directory and javac from there.
Any explanation is appreciated! The books and tutorials I'm learning from either assume you're just using NetBeans or don't have the package line at all.
You can compile your class using javac command from anywhere, as long as you provide correct relative or absolute path. The problems come when you want to run your program using the java program.
You have to provide the correct path corresponding to your package declaration. For example, if I had 'MyClass' in package mypackage, first line would look like this:
package mypackage;
class source stored on disk:
c:/MyNetbeansProject/src/mypackage/MyClass.java
Compiled bytecode:
c:/MyNetbeansProject/build/classes/mypackage/MyClass.class
Now, if I would have opened a command prompt/terminal in folder c:/MyNetbeansProject/build/classes/, I could run the program using java mypackage/MyClass or java mypackage.MyClass.
However, if i would be somewhere else, I would have to say where the class files are located using the cp option: java -cp c:/MyNetbeansProject/build/classes mypackage/MyClass. The path in cp option can be relative or absolute, use "" when it contains spaces.
Package are directory architecture.
If your class is in the package com.acme.test, the class should be in the com/acme/test directory.
Instead of placing your class in an empty folder, place it in a folder named firstprogram and do javac firstprogram/youclass.java
The package (and folder) permit you to arrange your architecture with logical pattern.
More info here : http://www.tutorialspoint.com/java/java_packages.htm
So like OcterA said, you should keep organized, but with only one class this is not the issue. I believe that your problem is that you are not entering the correct command into the command line.
First cd to the correct directory and when you want to execute a file within a package in that directory you need to enter
java packageName.className
In this case
java firstprogram.FirstProgram

Having trouble compiling a Java program, I am new to it. Can't figure out what to do with directories

I have been searching the web trying to find the answer to my question, but everywhere I look seems to have too complex of a solution for a beginner like me. I have been working on this project, and just now realized that I should've made a package, or something like that. The thing is though, my program was working fine until I started dabbling with it, and now it won't work at all. I am getting this error:
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError: BubbleSort. class
Caused by: java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: BubbleSort.class
at java.net.URLClassLoader.findClass(URLClassLoader.java:434)
at java.lang.ClassLoader.loadClass(ClassLoader.java:672)
at sun.misc.Launcher$AppClassLoader.loadClass(Launcher.java:358)
at ``java.lang.ClassLoader.loadClass(ClassLoader.java:638)
Could not find the main class: BubbleSort.class. Program will exit.
Here's how my "path" looks, if I am not mistaken. I am connected to my school's Z: drive through a remote connection, and from there I have a folder called myFirstname_Lastname_A4,
which then leads me to another folder called sortingzz which I believe is supposed to have only my source files, but it also ended up with my class files in there whenever I compiled. So here's what I am doing to compile.
cd myFirstname_Lastname_A4/sortingzz
javac *.java (Works fine, this is where I end up with my Class files inside of my sortingzz folder)
java * (This is where I get the error)
I am pretty sure I am just trying to run the program wrong. Before I started messing around with stuff I wasn't ready for, I used to just run the file with my main function in it, like this
javac SortingImplementation.java
java SortingImplementation
And that for the most part worked fine, but I started having trouble calling certain classes from other classes, so thats when I found out I was suppose to do the packaging and importing stuff.
In case that is the issue, I have on the top line of every source file:
package sortingzz;
and I am importing like this:
import sortingzz.*;
This is correct, right?
UPDATE:
I decided to give up on class pathing and trying to package everything, because as usual, I am getting responses that are way over my head, and to be honest I don't think it is necessary.
After removing package and importing from everything, and once again compiling using javac *., it actually compiles this time. However whenever I try to run my class with the main in it, SortingImplementation, it tells me that
Could not find the main class: SortingImplementation. Program will exit.
I don't get it, I am looking at the SortingImplementation.class right now, with all the other classes and java files, so I am not sure what it's trying to do.
javac *.java is fine. This will compile your files. However, you only need to run the file with your main method in it: java MainClass
You say that you are using packages to organize the classes. In this case you need to set the class path using the -cp flag.
javac -cp /path/to/parent/of/package classname.java
and
java classname
Also, your main class should be declared public and should have a main()
NoClassDefFoundError occures when a class was recognised in compile time but was not available during runtime.
So the JVM can't find your class in the classpath.
using -cp flag to specify where your package is should work.
the commanc javac *.java compiles all found java files to corresponding .class files. If you all your classfiles are in the same folder, which they should, you just run your regular java SortingImplementation command.
java * would, a bit depending on your OS, yield in an undesired command. For instance, on Linux it would be expanded by the OS to java SortingImplementation.java SortingImplementation.class BubbleSort. The last one is a directory, which ofcourse is not an executable class.

JPype Headaches

I've found several instructions on how to import user-built .class and .jar files to JPype, but I seem to be having a lot of trouble getting anything working at all.
What works: I can import standard java stuff and print HELLO WORLD and such.
Some of what I've tried:
I've tried adding -Djava.class.path with the path to a jar containing the relevant class files, to a directory structure containing (several folders down) the relevant .class files, as well as '-Djava.ext.dirs'. I've recompiled and re-installed with a different JVM location. The class I am attempting to instantiate is Outer, public, and has a public constructor.
I'm using Python 2.6.1 on OSX 10.6.
My current test file:
from jpype import *
startJVM(getDefaultJVMPath(), '-Djava.class.path=/Users/gestalt/Documents/msmexplorer_git/msmexplorer/MSMExplorer/build/classes')
java.lang.System.out.println("hello world")
msmexplorer = JPackage('org.joofee.meh.msmexplorer')
T = msmexplorer.MSMExplorer()
shutdownJVM()
If I use JClass I always get ClassNotFound exceptions from JPype; if I use JPackage I get Package not callable errors. Basically, JPype can't find my stuff.
Thanks so much!
EDIT (possibly helpful debugging stuff...):
Is there a straightforward way to print which third party java classes are available/imported?
Package not callable errors are referenced in this link) it would seem you need to make sure the java class file is accessible from the working directory. I am not sure how the jvm classpath comes into play, I would have thought how you did it would work.
You could also try loading the org package and then getting to the other packages through that one as the link I shared shows:
msmexplorer = JPackage('org').joofee.meh.msmexplorer
T = msmexplorer.MSMExplorer()

How do I run .class files on windows from command line?

I'm trying to run .class file from command line. It works when I manually move to the directory it's stored in, but when I try something like this:
java C:\Peter\Michael\Lazarus\Main
it says it can't find the main class. Is there any solution to this other than making a .jar file (I know that .jar is the best solution, but at this moment isn't the one I'm looking for)?
The Java application launcher (a.k.a java.exe or simply java) supports up to four different ways to specify what to launch (depending on which Java version you use).
Specifying a class name is the most basic way. Note that the class name is different from the file name.
java -cp path/to/classFiles/ mypackage.Main
Here we start the class mypackage.Main and use the -cp switch to specify the classpath which is used to find the class (the full path to the class mypackage.Main will be path/to/classFiles/mypackage/Main.class.
Starting a jar file.
java -jar myJar.jar
This puts the jar itself and anything specified on its Class-Path entry on the class path and starts the class indicated via the Main-Class entry. Note that in this case you can not specify any additional class path entries (they will be silently ignored).
Java 9 introduced modules and with that it introduce a way to launch a specific module in a way similar to how option #2 works (either by starting that modules dedicated main class or by starting a user-specified class within that module):
java --module my.module
Java 11 introduces support for Single-File Source Code Programs, which makes it very easy to execute Java programs that fit into a single source file. It even does the compile step for you:
java MyMain.java
This option can be useful for experimenting with Java for the first time, but quickly reaches its limits as it will not allow you to access classes that are defined in another source file (unless you compile them separately and put them on the classpath, which defeats the ease of use of this method and means you should probably switch back to option #1 in that case).
This feature was developed as JEP 330 and is still sometimes referred to as such.
For your specific case you'd use option #1 and tell java where to look for that class by using the -classpath option (or its short form -cp):
java -classpath C:\Peter\Michael\Lazarus\ Main
If your Main.java contains the entirety of your source code (and it is in the same directory), then you can use option #4, skip the compile step and directly compile-and-execute it:
java c:\Peter\Michael\Lazarus\Main.java
Assuming that Main.class does not have a package declaration:
java -cp C:\Peter\Michael\Lazarus\ Main
Java looks for classes in a "classpath", which can be set on the command line via the -cp option.
I just had the same issue, I tried running java hello.class, this is wrong.
The command should be java hello.
Do not include the file extension. It is looking for a class file, and will add the name on its own.
So running 'java hello.class' will tell it to go looking for 'hello.class.class' file.
Try this:
java -cp C:\Peter\Michael\Lazarus Main
You need to define the classpath.

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