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![]() ![]() If you upgrade your Java installation, you’ll need to update this file with the new location or install folder name. If you open this ‘very well documented’ file, you’ll see the all-important line near the top: Where is the Java? Specifically for SQL Developer, it’s here: Where we put the java settings for SQL Developer in version 4.0 on Windowsīasically speaking, if you have 3 people sharing a computer, each of them can have their own settings for how to run SQL Developer. To accommodate shared Windows machines, we now look into the roaming profiles directory in the Application Data folder. In version 4.0, we no longer look in nf for these specific Java flags and settings. Now, for all time eternal, SQL Developer would look (for Windows) in the nf file to see where the JDK is installed and also where you could configure how the JVM runs with the appropriate set parameter flags. This will make getting SQL Developer up and running that much easier for Windows users □ If it can’t, then it will ask you for some help. So as long as this EXE can answer these questions successfully, you won’t see the old prompt for the JDK anymore. EXE in the top SQL Developer directory does a few things when you run it in version 4.0: ![]() Well, for version 4.0, we’ve taken care of this. On Macs and Linux/Unix environments, we don’t prompt for the location of the JDK. Turns out, it’s hard for Java applications to run without Java. Tell SQL Developer where it can find Java In previous versions, the first thing you’d see when running SQL Developer would be a prompt asking for the location of Java. A few things have changed when it comes to running SQL Developer on a Windows machine.
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