On Wednesday 22 August 2001 09:07 pm, Dr. Evil escribió:
> It seems very difficult to get the Linux java stuff working. When I
> installed Mandrake, it came with a bunch of java stuff:
>
> /usr/bin/java /usr/bin/javac /usr/bin/javadoc /usr/bin/javakey
> /usr/bin/javap
>
> However, when I set m
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Tom Brinkman
> Sent: Thursday, August 23, 2001 9:42 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [newbie] Any hope for Java on Linux?
>
>
> On Wednesday 22 August 2001
Dear Dr. Evil,
I too have installed Sun's jdk1.3.1 on Mandrake 8.0, and I use it every
day to write software in Java. As long as you set up the appropriate
environment variables (namely PATH and CLASSPATH), you shouldn't have any
trouble writing, compiling, and running Java programs.
If you wou
If it's any consolation, I know Java developers who
use Linux full time and consider it a fine development
platform. I think IBM does a slick Java JVM -- but
none of this is personal experience (I've written some
Java in Windoze and that's it).
Kirby
Want to buy your Pack or Services from M
It seems very difficult to get the Linux java stuff working. When I
installed Mandrake, it came with a bunch of java stuff:
/usr/bin/java /usr/bin/javac /usr/bin/javadoc /usr/bin/javakey
/usr/bin/javap
However, when I set my java interpreter to /usr/bin/java in Konqueror,
it wouldn't run ja