Scott Simpson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Antoine Levy-Lambert wrote:
>> Hello Scott, Dick,
>> as usual a look at the manual can help. [1]
>> The answer is to use the fork attribute of the javac task, and specify the
>> executable.
>> would do for
>> instance.
>
> You aren't understanding my pr
Now that I understand your problem (I think), why do you need to "find"
the installations of the jdk's rather than having each JDK location set
in a property? On any machine that is doing builds it is good practice
to install the JDK's in consistent locations, this lets you create
properties f
Antoine Levy-Lambert wrote:
Hello Scott, Dick,
as usual a look at the manual can help. [1]
The answer is to use the fork attribute of the javac task, and specify
the executable.
would do for
instance.
You aren't understanding my problem. Of course I know how to call using
different JDKs. The p
Sorry, misinterpreted your post.
-Original Message-
From: Scott Simpson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, January 06, 2005 7:21 PM
To: user@ant.apache.org
Subject: Re: Want to build under multiple JDKs
Dick, Brian E. wrote:
> There is a java.version property. Maybe you can
Hello Scott, Dick,
as usual a look at the manual can help. [1]
The answer is to use the fork attribute of the javac task, and specify
the executable.
would do for
instance.
(of course in real life you will use properties to tell ant where javac
of JDK 1.3 is installed.)
Cheers,
Antoine
[1] h
Dick, Brian E. wrote:
There is a java.version property. Maybe you can use that instead of
checking the PATH.
That won't work. I want to use two different JDKs in the same build. The
java.version property just tells me the one it found. This also implies
that I have to spawn the JDK as a separate
There is a java.version property. Maybe you can use that instead of
checking the PATH.
-Original Message-
From: Scott Simpson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, January 06, 2005 6:42 PM
To: user@ant.apache.org
Subject: Want to build under multiple JDKs
We have some Java code that