The Derby Database is not included in the jdk1.8.0_191 We are using Windows 7 64 bit. We are using Netbeans 8.2 configured to use jdk1.8.0_162 and with this jdk we can embed the derby database for JavaFX applications. Our question is can we install the derby database in the jdk1.8.0_191 with the steps listed below?
Down Load Link
We downloaded lib distribution - contains only the jar files for Derby.
and unzip the file. Next we created a folder in jdk1.8.0_191 named "db" with a sub folder named "lib" and will copy the unziped files to this sub folder lib
We notice that the files in the db sub folder named "bin" are missing as is the sub folder bin. Yes we are being conservative here and asking for help because we do not want to mess up or older JavaFX projects. Step by Step directions will be greatly appreciated.
Related
I have always developed my java NetBeans projects. When I finish my project, and automatically build "dist" folder where the main jar and a "lib" folder containing all the external jar was created. This is done automatically with the NetBeans IDE
Now I'm trying to do a project with jdeveloper 12c Java Desktop Application and try to deploy my project but I have problems with java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError. I meet several questions:
Can you add the same structure as I said before? That is, a file jar and inside a folder "lib" place the jars using How to do it?
I've seen examples that by New File Group adds refencias, but it really adds to the main jar file (as I see in the size of the file) but not saved in a separate folder.
I do not know if you can help me do this in jdeveloper 12c: Generate a jar file and folder lib with references.
Thank you for your help.
Go into the deployment profile for your project and add all the libraries and files that you need to be included to the JAR you are generating.
I have found that in earlier releases of Apache Derby such as 10.8.2.2 the plugin meant for eclipse could be easily found.
There are four distributions listed on Derby download page
bin distribution - contains the documentation, javadoc, and jar files for Derby.
lib distribution - contains only the jar files for Derby.
lib-debug distribution - contains jar files for Derby with source line numbers.
src distribution - contains the Derby source tree at the point which the binaries were built.
I downloaded the lib distribution which consisted of many jar file but no apparent eclipse plugin. So how can I drop the plugin in plugin folder of eclipse distribution?
I need a step to step on how to plug tess4j to Eclipse.
I found this online:
creating a lib directory and copied the tess4j.jar and its required jar in;
added the jars to build path
copied the tessdata directory and tessdll.dll file into the project root directory.
Now it just works.
I only know basic Java so I have no idea what creating a lib directory and copy directory file means at all.
Can someone help me to plug this library and make it work for eclipse because I am working in a project that needs ocr.
creating a lib directory and copied the tess4j.jar and its required jar in;
A JAR (Java ARchive) file is a collection of compiled Java classes. This is the usual way to distribute Java libraries. You should create a new folder in your project (right click your project, "New", "Folder") and copy/move the JAR you downloaded to this newly created directory. If tess4j has dependencies, i.e. needs other JARs to work, you have to put them in this directory.
added the jars to build path
You need to tell Eclipse to add the JARs to the build path, i.e. Eclipse needs to know where to get the tess4j classes from. Locate the lib folder and select all JAR files. Right click them and select "Build Path", "Add to Build Path".
copied the tessdata directory and tessdll.dll file into the project root directory.
Should be clear ;-)
My environment:
Netbean 6.9.1
Glassfish 3.0.1
Windows 7
Goal:
When my coworkers opens the Netbean Project, the library is already referenced without them manually create library, adding jars into it and reference it.
Detail:
I created Netbean project and the project has reference to few jar files in the folder.
Currently whoever opens the project for the first time, they have to manually create library and refer it to the project.
My project location:
C:\Users\masatosan\Desktop\myProject\myApp
My library location:
C:\Users\masatosan\Desktop\myProject\lib\myLib
The myLib folder contains:
some1.jar
some2.jar
some3.jar
I can achieve my goal if I create reference to individual jar file by defining to project.properties file like below: (creating reference to sqljdbc4.jar)
file.reference.sqljdbc4.jar=../lib/sqljdbc4.jar
javac.classpath=\
${libs.restlib_gfv3ee6.classpath}:\
${file.reference.sqljdbc4.jar}:
But my case is different since I have 3 jars in the myLib folder and wanting to reference them all.
Is it possible to reference all jars in myLib folder?
Please let me know if you need more clarification.
I'm sorry, but it doesn't work that way. When you create a project, you have to add the jar files individually.
However, if you put your lib folder under your project, netbeans will refer to them via relative paths. Then when you share the project (lib directory included), netbeans will be able to automatically find the jar files when the next person uses the project. That way you only have to add jar files once.
Short of using a dependency management tool like maven (which Netbeans has good support for), this is really the best solution. It uses a bit more disk space (obviously), but that's never been a huge issue for me.
I figured how so let me share.
Tool --> Library then library window pop up.
Create library called "MyLib" which contains multiple jars.
Add "MyLib" to your project. This change will be written to project.properties file under nbproject folder.
project.properties file indicates the classpath of lib reference you just added.
It should look like something below
javac.classpath=\
${libs.Excella.classpath}:\
${libs.MyLib.classpath}
Now someone else opens the project from different machine and she just needs to do step#1 and #2, which is to create library with same library name i.e. "MyLib"
I think this is what Bill was saying originally but thought it would be helpful to give step by step instructions since I finally figured .... after long time :D
i have successfully configured sphinx4 with eclipse.
for that these steps i have used.
copy my java and config files to SRC folder
all the necessary jar files (in the lib). the lib folder added to the root of the project
build those jar files (jsapi files too)
change the configuration file and give the proper path
test the java file
but in Netbeans i really dont understand how to do the proper steps. can someone help me. the jar files should be added to "Libraries" rite.
then after adding them how to build them.
in the netbeans it dont show a SRC folder. so all the java files and configuration files should go to Source Packages folder rite.
can someone help me with this. please
If you have sphinx4-1.0beta6 then you can just open the folder up as a netbeans project. Open netbeans, click open project, then navigate to the sphinx folder and open it. It is already a netbeans project file type as of this version. I assume this will work in later versions also. I have no clue why sphinx doesn't say this on their website.
Sphinx4 is a Java library available in OSS repository, so you can use it as any library.
If your project uses maven/gradle, add repository in your project configuration, then add dependency on two packages - sphinx4 core and sphinx4-data. The former is the main library, the latter is required if you want to recognize US English. Then just start writing the code.
If you want to rely on jar files, just download sphinx4-core and sphinx4-data files from the repository and add them as dependency to the project, then start writing code.
If you want to modify or develop sphinx4 itself, install Gradle support in your IDE, then import latest sphinx4 sources as a Gradle project.
For more details and links see the tutorial
http://cmusphinx.sourceforge.net/wiki/tutorialsphinx4
click on Add JAR/Folder
select jar file you want to add