![]() Infamous "DLL-Hell" problem just described.) NET initiative actually seeks to solve the We still haven't progressed much beyond that. Start of the infamous "Installing-this-app-breaks-my-system" woes began with Microsoft's DLL schemes, This can complicate deployment of JavaĪpplications across the corporation, and lead customers to wonder precisely why, five years after the ![]() Required by a new (seemingly unrelated) application release. Java from just six months ago may suddenly "not work" due to the installation of some Java Extension Worse yet, this problem can be found even within the corporate enterprise, as systems developed using Some require the "" packages from pre-Swing 1.0ĭays, others require the "javax.swing" package names. Require a Servlet 2.1-compliant environment, some require 2.2. Unfortunately, not all of these tools play nicely together under the same Java VM installation. With the exponential growth of Java as a server-side development language has come an equivablentĮxponential growth in Java development tools, environments, frameworks, and extensions. ![]() ![]() Without regurgitating information, from a guy much more clever than me, I would rather point to to his article on this issue, which for me, resolves it perfectly.Īrticle by: Ted Neward: Multiple Java Homes: Giving Java Apps Their Own JRE I got here, because of multiple JREs, and how to content with it. I was appalled at the clumsiness of the CLASSPATH, JAVA_HOME, and PATH ideas, in Windows, to keep track of Java files. ![]()
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