I want to compile my .java's (several) into one .jar
that are compatible with at least Java 1.6
and newer, preferably Java 1.5
and newer versions of Java. (I have Java 1.7.0_5
)
问题:
回答1:
Yes, you can set the version of compiler at compile time. And compile your java code into old versions of java.
From Oracle article : http://docs.oracle.com/javase/1.5.0/docs/tooldocs/windows/javac.html
Cross-Compilation Example
Here we use javac to compile code that will run on a 1.4 VM.
% javac -target 1.4 -bootclasspath jdk1.4.2/lib/classes.zip \
-extdirs "" OldCode.java
You might also need following parameter to set denote the version of your code.
-source release
-Specifies the version of source code accepted.
回答2:
As of JDK 9, javac support a new option for cross-compiling
javac --release N ...
which is equivalent to
javac -source N -target N –bootclasspath rtN.jar
回答3:
You can use javac -target 1.5 <source files>
.
If you're using a build system, Eclipse or some other IDE to build jars, please specify which one.
回答4:
You can specify the target version of the compiler lower than the build java version (all answers basically said that) but you should not: it is quite messy as it only works if you also supply the class libraries for the actual target version. If you do that you are much better off with simply using this old Java version to compile. Much cleaner and less stuff to setup. For Java 9 the options are a bit nicer but you still need an old JDK lying around for the rt.jar.
What you can do is in your ide and dedvelopment cycle use the -target
/-bootclasspath
trick to get faster compiler and better warnings, but IT and release builds then should be done with the target version.
回答5:
You can use the newest version of the JDK and set the source level to 1.5 - as long as you don't use classes / methods that were introduced after 1.5 you should be ok for all versions of the JVM 1.5 and above:
-source 1.5