Java 7 Free Download For Windows 10 64-bit

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Keri Gamrath

unread,
Aug 4, 2024, 8:01:37 PM8/4/24
to nasabpostthand
Iam having the same issue. I have never had 32-bit Java in my life and when I look up what Java version, it still says I have 64-bit, but Technic launcher says I only have 32-bit therefore I only get 1 Gb of ram. Please help!

I tried the above solution, I've checked the command prompt to see if I have any additional instances of Java installed, I've manually scoured through my files to make sure... I definitely only have 64-bit Java installed and yet Technic refuses to recognize it. Any helpful hints would be greatly appreciated.


for anyone coming to all these years-old threads looking to fix this problem, what helped me is updating whatever version of java i'm using WITHOUT uninstalling the previous version that technic was recognizing, opening the technic launcher, navigating to launcher options and changing which version of java to use. from here i was able to change my ram from 1gb to 4gb perfectly fine.


i have never had java 32bit installed. for whatever reason the technic launcher ran just fine with my 8.231 version of java 64bit, but upgrading to 8.381 made it unable to run. many people in other threads here and on reddit said to uninstall the previous version and keep the latest version, but the only thing that worked for me was having both versions and just switching which version to use within the technic launcher.


When you have installed a 64-bit LibreOffice, and 32-bit JRE, LibreOffice would not be able to find and use the JRE, no matter how hard you would try it. Take care that you download from the Java home page (www.java.com) the right architecture. In this case, LibreOffice (of reasonably fresh version) would try to be helpful in its "JRE Required" error message, telling you that it needs specific architecture (e.g., 64-bit) of JRE.


Launching Java Control Panel ("Configure Java" available in Windows Start menu), and clicking "View" button on "Java" tab, opens Java Runtime Environment Settings window with Architecture column allowing to see if installed instances are 32-bit (x86) or 64-bit (x86_64).


On macOS 10.10 and newer, please note that you need to install JDK, not JRE. You may find download links choosing JDK version on this page. Note that Apple M1 is an Arm 64 architecture.On macOS 10.09, neither JRE, nor JDK are found.LibreOffice releases available from Apple App Store don't include Java support at all, because apps distributed in the App Store are not allowed to depend on optional functionality like Java.


If you later install the 64-bit JRE or JDK of the same version, JRE 8 Update 221 b27, will the System "Path" environment variable be overridden with the 64-bit JRE, such that the 64-bit JRE becomes the system default 'java' executable?


In this Document

GoalSolutionReferences

My Oracle Support provides customers with access to over a million knowledge articles and a vibrant support community of peers and Oracle experts.




JMRI runs in 32-bit mode, even on 64-bit Windows systems.Even after installing Java on a Windows Vista 64-bit computer, JMRI applications won't start because the "java" command can't befound.John Sacrey provided instructions on how to update the Windows "path" variable so that Java is found:This will get you to where the System Environment variables are defined:Right Click on "My Computer" and select "Properties"Click the "Advanced" tabClick the "Environment Variables" buttonScroll the System variables list until you see "Path", select itClick the "Edit" button and it will bring up an edit boxLocate "%SystemRoot%\system32;" in the string and insert"%systemroot%\SysWOW64;" after it, minus the quotation marks.This works on BOTH XP x64 and Vista x64.Two java.com links that might provide help: -windows-64.html Installation Procedure Thanks and congratulations to all who contributed! Contact us via the JMRI users Groups.io group.


Compiled MATLAB code containing only MATLAB files are platform independent, as are Java .jar files. You can use these files on any platform, provided that the platform has either MATLAB or MATLAB Runtime installed. However, if your compiled MATLAB code contains MEX files, which are platform dependent, do the following:


For example, if you are running the application on a Windows machine, and you want it to run on the Linux 64-bit platform, compile my_mex.c twice, once on a PC to get my_mex.mexw64 and then again on a Linux 64-bit machine to get my_mex.mexa64.


In the case above, you run mcc on Windows and include the -a flag to include my_mex.mexa64. It is not necessary to explicitly include my_mex.mexw64. In this step , the mcc command would be: mcc -W 'java:mycomp,myclass' my_matlab_file.m -a my_mex.mexa64


For example, if you are running mcc on a Windows machine and you want to ensure portability of the generated package that invokes the yprime.c file (from matlabroot\extern\examples\mex) on the Linux 64-bit platform, execute the following mcc command: mcc -W 'java:mycomp,myclass' callyprime.m -a yprime.mexa64 callyprime.m can be a simple MATLAB function, as follows:function callyprime disp(yprime(1,1:4)); Ensure that the yprime.mexa64 file is in the same folder as your Windows MEX file.

3a8082e126
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages