I\'ve tried both the example in Oracle\'s Java Tutorials. They both compile fine, but at run-time, both come up with this error:
Exception in thread \"main\"
After you compile your code, you end up with .class
files for each class in your program. These binary files are the bytecode that Java interprets to execute your program. The NoClassDefFoundError
indicates that the classloader (in this case java.net.URLClassLoader
), which is responsible for dynamically loading classes, cannot find the .class
file for the class that you're trying to use.
Your code wouldn't compile if the required classes weren't present (unless classes are loaded with reflection), so usually this exception means that your classpath doesn't include the required classes. Remember that the classloader (specifically java.net.URLClassLoader
) will look for classes in package a.b.c in folder a/b/c/ in each entry in your classpath. NoClassDefFoundError
can also indicate that you're missing a transitive dependency of a .jar file that you've compiled against and you're trying to use.
For example, if you had a class com.example.Foo
, after compiling you would have a class file Foo.class
. Say for example your working directory is .../project/
. That class file must be placed in .../project/com/example
, and you would set your classpath to .../project/
.
Side note: I would recommend taking advantage of the amazing tooling that exists for Java and JVM languages. Modern IDE's like Eclipse and IDEA and build management tools like Maven or Gradle will help you not have to worry about classpaths (as much) and focus on the code! That said, this link explains how to set the classpath when you execute on the command line.