What's the default classpath when not specifying classpath?
Wondering what will be the default classpath when not specifying classpath option?
Solution 1:
The current working directory (.
).
From The Java™ tutorials: PATH and CLASSPATH:
The default value of the class path is ".", meaning that only the current directory is searched. Specifying either the CLASSPATH variable or the -cp command line switch overrides this value.
Does this include subdirectories?
No, no entry in the classpath is "recursive". You have to list each subdirectory (or jar) explicitly. However, if you have an Example.class
file representing class pkg.subpkg.Example
, and the default classpath is used, then this file should live in ./pkg/subpkg/Example.class
.
If java
attempts to resolve pkg.subpkg.Example
it will look in /pkg/subpkg
of each classpath entry. I.e. you do not have to list .
, pkg
, and pkg/subpkg
in the classpath, only .
.
Solution 2:
I think people are answering this person's question too literally. Yes, CLASSPATH defaults to ".", but there are a bunch of classes that automatically get loaded even when you don't set CLASSPATH or use the -classpath command line argument.
The following is a good place to learn about this process:
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/technotes/tools/findingclasses.html