How to execute a java .class from the command line

Try:

java -cp . Echo "hello"

Assuming that you compiled with:

javac Echo.java 

Then there is a chance that the "current" directory is not in your classpath ( where java looks for .class definitions )

If that's the case and listing the contents of your dir displays:

Echo.java
Echo.class

Then any of this may work:

java -cp . Echo "hello"

or

SET CLASSPATH=%CLASSPATH;.  

java Echo "hello"

And later as Fredrik points out you'll get another error message like.

Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NoSuchMethodError: main

When that happens, go and read his answer :)


With Java 11 you won't have to go through this rigmarole anymore!

Instead, you can do this:

> java MyApp.java

You don't have to compile beforehand, as it's all done in one step.

You can get the Java 11 JDK here: JDK 11 GA Release


You need to specify the classpath. This should do it:

java -cp . Echo "hello"

This tells java to use . (the current directory) as its classpath, i.e. the place where it looks for classes. Note than when you use packages, the classpath has to contain the root directory, not the package subdirectories. e.g. if your class is my.package.Echo and the .class file is bin/my/package/Echo.class, the correct classpath directory is bin.


You have no valid main method... The signature should be: public static void main(String[] args);

Hence, in your case the code should look like this:

public class Echo {
    public static void main (String[] arg) {

            System.out.println(arg[0]);
    }
}

Edit: Please note that Oscar is also right in that you are missing . in your classpath, you would run into the problem I solve after you have dealt with that error.


If you have in your java source

package mypackage;

and your class is hello.java with

public class hello {

and in that hello.java you have

 public static void main(String[] args) {

Then (after compilation) changeDir (cd) to the directory where your hello.class is. Then

java -cp . mypackage.hello

Mind the current directory and the package name before the class name. It works for my on linux mint and i hope on the other os's also

Thanks Stack overflow for a wealth of info.