Trail: Essential Classes
Lesson: The Platform Environment
Answers to Questions and Exercises: The Platform Environment

Questions

Question 1.A programmer installs a new library contained in a .jar file. In order to access the library from his code, he sets the CLASSPATH environment variable to point to the new .jar file. Now he finds that he gets an error message when he tries to launch simple applications:

java Hello
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError: Hello
In this case, the Hello class is compiled into a .class file in the current directory — yet the java command can't seem to find it. What's going wrong?


Answer 1. A class is only found if it appears in the class path. By default, the class path consists of the current directory. If the CLASSPATH environment variable is set, and doesn't include the current directory, the launcher can no longer find classes in the current directory. The solution is to change the CLASSPATH variable to include the current directory. For example, if the CLASSPATH value is c:\java\newLibrary.jar (Windows) or /home/me/newLibrary.jar (UNIX or Linux) it needs to be changed to .;c:\java\newLibrary.jar or .:/home/me/newLibrary.jar.


Exercises

Exercise 1. Write an application, PersistentEcho, with the following features:


Answer 1.
import java.util.Properties;
import java.io.FileInputStream;
import java.io.FileOutputStream;
import java.io.IOException;

public class PersistentEcho {
    public static void main (String[] args) {
        String argString = "";
        boolean notProperty = true;

        //Are there arguments? If so retrieve them.
        if (args.length > 0) {
            for (String arg: args) {
                argString += arg + " ";
            }
            argString = argString.trim();
        }
        //No arguments, is there an environment variable? If so,
        //retrieve it.
        else if ((argString = System.getenv("PERSISTENTECHO")) != null) {}
        //No environment variable either. Retrieve property value.
        else {
            notProperty = false;
            //Set argString to null. If it's still null after we exit
            //the try block, we've failed to retrieve the property
            //value.
            argString = null;
            FileInputStream fileInputStream = null;
            try {
                fileInputStream = new FileInputStream("PersistentEcho.txt");
                Properties inProperties = new Properties();
                inProperties.load(fileInputStream);
                argString = inProperties.getProperty("argString");
            } catch (IOException e) {
                System.err.println("Can't read property file.");
                System.exit(1);
            } finally {
                if (fileInputStream != null) {
                    try {
                        fileInputStream.close();
                    } catch(IOException e) {};
                }
            }
        }
        if (argString == null) {
            System.err.println("Couldn't find argString property");
            System.exit(1);
        }

        //Somehow, we got the value. Echo it already!
        System.out.println(argString);

        //If we didn't retrieve the value from the property, save it
        //in the property.
        if (notProperty) {
            Properties outProperties = new Properties();
            outProperties.setProperty("argString", argString);
            FileOutputStream fileOutputStream = null;
            try {
                fileOutputStream = new FileOutputStream("PersistentEcho.txt");
                outProperties.store(fileOutputStream,
                        "PersistentEcho properties");
            } catch (IOException e) {}
            finally {
                if (fileOutputStream != null) {
                    try {
                        fileOutputStream.close();
                    } catch(IOException e) {};
                }
            }
        }
    }
}


Previous page: Questions and Exercises: The Platform Environment