peter
Nice people here recently showed me how to set PATH.
I downloaded jdk1.3.1 from sun and it was installed under usr/java/
I added :
export PATH=$PATH:'/usr/java/jdk1.3.1_01/bin'
at the end in the file ~/.bashrc (that is the file .bashrc in the
home-directory. Alternative is to
On Saturday 20 October 2001 4:22 am, Lars Thilander wrote:
peter
Nice people here recently showed me how to set PATH.
I downloaded jdk1.3.1 from sun and it was installed under usr/java/
I added :
export PATH=$PATH:'/usr/java/jdk1.3.1_01/bin'
at the end in the file ~/.bashrc (that
Edit your ~/.bashrc or ~/.bash_profile
-JMS
|-Original Message-
|From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
|[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Peter Watson
|Sent: Thursday, October 18, 2001 7:03 AM
|To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
|Subject: Re: [newbie] installing jdk...
|
|
|On Wednesday 17 October 2001 12
PATH=$PATH:/home/edmz/Java/j2dk1.3.1/bin
CLASSPATH=/home/edmz/Java/source
But you'd probably want to rather do
PATH=/home/edmz/Java/j2dk1.3.1/bin:$PATH
so that the older java and javac files that come with the distribution
don't get called in preference to your new ones. As I understand
edmz,
You can put your jdk directory and files any where you want.
Let's say you install the jdk in:
/home/edmz/Java/j2dk1.3.1/
When you open a shell, you can manually set the path to include your java
dir:
export PATH=$PATH:/home/edmz/Java/j2dk1.3.1/bin
Ideally, you'll probably want your