What does a “Cannot find symbol” compilation error mean?





.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty{ height:90px;width:728px;box-sizing:border-box;
}







326















Please explain the following about the "Cannot find symbol" error:




  • What does this error mean?

  • What things can cause this error?

  • How does the programmer go about fixing this error?


This question is designed to be a comprehensive question about "cannot find symbol" compilation errors in Java.










share|improve this question































    326















    Please explain the following about the "Cannot find symbol" error:




    • What does this error mean?

    • What things can cause this error?

    • How does the programmer go about fixing this error?


    This question is designed to be a comprehensive question about "cannot find symbol" compilation errors in Java.










    share|improve this question



























      326












      326








      326


      86






      Please explain the following about the "Cannot find symbol" error:




      • What does this error mean?

      • What things can cause this error?

      • How does the programmer go about fixing this error?


      This question is designed to be a comprehensive question about "cannot find symbol" compilation errors in Java.










      share|improve this question
















      Please explain the following about the "Cannot find symbol" error:




      • What does this error mean?

      • What things can cause this error?

      • How does the programmer go about fixing this error?


      This question is designed to be a comprehensive question about "cannot find symbol" compilation errors in Java.







      java compiler-errors cannot-find-symbol






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Mar 22 '17 at 16:17









      Taryn

      193k47295358




      193k47295358










      asked Sep 7 '14 at 1:12









      Stephen CStephen C

      526k72586944




      526k72586944
























          10 Answers
          10






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          343














          1. What does a "Cannot find symbol" error mean?



          Firstly, it is a compilation error1. It means that either there is a problem in your Java source code, or there is a problem in the way that you are compiling it.



          Your Java source code consists of the following things:




          • Keywords: like true, false, class, while, and so on.

          • Literals: like 42 and 'X' and "Hi mum!".

          • Operators and other non-alphanumeric tokens: like +, =, {, and so on.

          • Identifiers: like Reader, i, toString, processEquibalancedElephants, and so on.

          • Comments and whitespace.


          A "Cannot find symbol" error is about the identifiers. When your code is compiled, the compiler needs to work out what each and every identifier in your code means.



          A "Cannot find symbol" error means that the compiler cannot do this. Your code appears to be referring to something that the compiler doesn't understand.



          2. What can cause a "Cannot find symbol" error?



          As a first order, there is only one cause. The compiler looked in all of the places where the identifier should be defined, and it couldn't find the definition. This could be caused by a number of things. The common ones are as follows:




          • For identifiers in general:


            • Perhaps you spelled the name incorrectly; i.e. StringBiulder instead of StringBuilder. Java cannot and will not attempt to compensate for bad spelling or typing errors.

            • Perhaps you got the case wrong; i.e. stringBuilder instead of StringBuilder. All Java identifiers are case sensitive.

            • Perhaps you used underscores inappropriately; i.e. mystring and my_string are different. (If you stick to the Java style rules, you will be largely protected from this mistake ...)

            • Perhaps you are trying to use something that was declared "somewhere else"; i.e. in a different context to where you have implicitly told the compiler to look. (A different class? A different scope? A different package? A different code-base?)



          • For identifiers that should refer to variables:


            • Perhaps you forgot to declare the variable.

            • Perhaps the variable declaration is out of scope at the point you tried to use it. (See example below)



          • For identifiers that should be method or field names:


            • Perhaps you are trying to refer to an inherited method or field that wasn't declared in the parent / ancestor classes or interfaces.

            • Perhaps you are trying to refer to a method or field that does not exist (i.e. has not been declared) in the type you are using; e.g. "someString".push()2.

            • Perhaps you are trying to use a method as a field, or vice versa; e.g. "someString".length or someArray.length().




          • For identifiers that should be class names:




            • Perhaps you forgot to import the class.

            • Perhaps you used "star" imports, but the class isn't defined in any of the packages that you imported.


            • Perhaps you forgot a new as in:



              String s = String();  // should be 'new String()'





          • For cases where type or instance doesn't appear to have the member you were expecting it to have:




            • Perhaps you have declared a nested class or a generic parameter that shadows the type you were meaning to use.

            • Perhaps you are shadowing a static or instance variable.

            • Perhaps you imported the wrong type; e.g. due to IDE completion or auto-correction.

            • Perhaps you are using (compiling against) the wrong version of an API.

            • Perhaps you forgot to cast your object to an appropriate subclass.




          The problem is often a combination of the above. For example, maybe you "star" imported java.io.* and then tried to use the Files class ... which is in java.nio not java.io. Or maybe you meant to write File ... which is a class in java.io.





          Here is an example of how incorrect variable scoping can lead to a "Cannot find symbol" error:



          for (int i = 0; i < strings.size(); i++) {
          if (strings.get(i).equalsIgnoreCase("fnoord")) {
          break;
          }
          }
          if (i < strings.size()) {
          ...
          }


          This will give a "Cannot find symbol" error for i in the if statement. Though we previously declared i, that declaration is only in scope for the for statement and its body. The reference to i in the if statement cannot see that declaration of i. It is out of scope.



          (An appropriate correction here might be to move the if statement inside the loop, or to declare i before the start of the loop.)





          Here is an example that causes puzzlement where a typo leads to a seemingly inexplicable "Cannot find symbol" error:



          for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++); {
          System.out.println("i is " + i);
          }


          This will give you a compilation error in the println call saying that i cannot be found. But (I hear you say) I did declare it!



          The problem is the sneaky semicolon ( ; ) before the {. The Java language syntax defines a semicolon in that context to be an empty statement. The empty statement then becomes the body of the for loop. So that code actually means this:



          for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++); 

          // The previous and following are separate statements!!

          {
          System.out.println("i is " + i);
          }


          The { ... } block is NOT the body of the for loop, and therefore the previous declaration of i in the for statement is out of scope in the block.





          Here is another example of "Cannot find symbol" error that is caused by a typo.



          int tmp = ...
          int res = tmp(a + b);


          Despite the previous declaration, the tmp in the tmp(...) expression is erroneous. The compiler will look for a method called tmp, and won't find one. The previously declared tmp is in the namespace for variables, not the namespace for methods.



          In the example I came across, the programmer had actually left out an operator. What he meant to write was this:



          int res = tmp * (a + b);




          There is another reason why the compiler might not find a symbol if you are compiling from the command line. You might simply have forgotten to compile or recompile some other class. For example, if you have classes Foo and Bar where Foo uses Bar. If you have never compiled Bar and you run javac Foo.java, you are liable to find that the compiler can't find the symbol Bar. The simple answer is to compile Foo and Bar together; e.g. javac Foo.java Bar.java or javac *.java. Or better still use a Java build tool; e.g. Ant, Maven, Gradle and so on.



          There are some other more obscure causes too ... which I will deal with below.



          3. How do I fix these errors ?



          Generally speaking, you start out by figuring out what caused the compilation error.




          • Look at the line in the file indicated by the compilation error message.

          • Identify which symbol that the error message is talking about.

          • Figure out why the compiler is saying that it cannot find the symbol; see above!


          Then you think about what your code is supposed to be saying. Then finally you work out what correction you need to make to your source code to do what you want.



          Note that not every "correction" is correct. Consider this:



          for (int i = 1; i < 10; i++) {
          for (j = 1; j < 10; j++) {
          ...
          }
          }


          Suppose that the compiler says "Cannot find symbol" for j. There are many ways I could "fix" that:




          • I could change the inner for to for (int j = 1; j < 10; j++) - probably correct.

          • I could add a declaration for j before the inner for loop, or the outer for loop - possibly correct.

          • I could change j to i in the inner for loop - probably wrong!

          • and so on.


          The point is that you need to understand what your code is trying to do in order to find the right fix.



          4. Obscure causes



          Here are a couple of cases where the "Cannot find symbol" is seemingly inexplicable ... until you look closer.




          1. Incorrect dependencies: If you are using an IDE or a build tool that manages the build path and project dependencies, you may have made a mistake with the dependencies; e.g. left out a dependency, or selected the wrong version. If you are using a build tool (Ant, Maven, Gradle, etc), check the project's build file. If you are using an IDE, check the project's build path configuration.


          2. You are not recompiling: It sometimes happens that new Java programmers don't understand how the Java tool chain works, or haven't implemented a repeatable "build process"; e.g. using an IDE, Ant, Maven, Gradle and so on. In such a situation, the programmer can end up chasing his tail looking for an illusory error that is actually caused by not recompiling the code properly, and the like ...


          3. An earlier build problem: It is possible that an earlier build failed in a way that gave a JAR file with missing classes. Such a failure would typically be noticed if you were using a build tool. However if you are getting JAR files from someone else, you are dependent on them building properly, and noticing errors. If you suspect this, use tar -tvf to list the contents of the suspect JAR file.



          4. IDE issues: People have reported cases where their IDE gets confused and the compiler in the IDE cannot find a class that exists ... or the reverse situation.




            • This can happen if the IDE's caches get out of sync with the file system. There are IDE specific ways to fix that.


            • This could be an IDE bug. For instance @Joel Costigliola describes a scenario where Eclipse does not handle a Maven "test" tree correctly: see this answer.





          5. Redefining system classes: I've seen cases where the compiler complains that substring is an unknown symbol in something like the following



            String s = ...
            String s1 = s.substring(1);


            It turned out that the programmer had created their own version of String and that his version of the class didn't define a substring methods.



            Lesson: Don't define your own classes with the same names as common library classes!




          6. Homoglyphs: If you use UTF-8 encoding for your source files, it is possible to have identifiers that look the same, but are in fact different because they contain homoglyphs. See this page for more information.



            You can avoid this by restricting yourself to ASCII or Latin-1 as the source file encoding, and using Java uxxxx escapes for other characters.






          1 - If, perchance, you do see this in a runtime exception or error message, then either you have configured your IDE to run code with compilation errors, or your application is generating and compiling code .. at runtime.



          2 - The three basic principles of Civil Engineering: water doesn't flow uphill, a plank is stronger on its side, and you can't push on a string.






          share|improve this answer


























          • I had another situation where this compilation error occured while eclipse didn't see the problem: Two classes with dependencies defined in the respectively other class. In my case I had an enum, implementing an interface, defined in a class where I foolishly already used the enum.

            – Jogi
            May 23 '16 at 7:28













          • Somewhat similarly to the comment above, when I compile and run my program from Eclipse it works no problem. Compiling it from the console raises a bunch of these "Cannot find symbol" errors often related to last element in an import. I have no idea what is causing this as there is nothing wrong in the code really.

            – Andres Stadelmann
            May 27 '16 at 16:42











          • People new to Java are sometimes mixing up array types with their component types, for instance String strings = { "hello", "world" }; strings.chatAt(3);.

            – MC Emperor
            Aug 13 '18 at 11:14



















          21














          You'll also get this error if you forget a new:



          String s = String();


          versus



          String s = new String();





          share|improve this answer































            14














            One more example of 'Variable is out of scope'



            As I've seen that kind of questions a few times already, maybe one more example to what's illegal even if it might feel okay.



            Consider this code:



            if(somethingIsTrue()) {
            String message = "Everything is fine";
            } else {
            String message = "We have an error";
            }
            System.out.println(message);


            That's invalid code. Because neither of the variables named message is visible outside of their respective scope - which would be the surrounding brackets {} in this case.



            You might say: "But a variable named message is defined either way - so message is defined after the if".



            But you'd be wrong.



            Java has no free() or delete operators, so it has to rely on tracking variable scope to find out when variables are no longer used (together with references to these variables of cause).



            It's especially bad if you thought you did something good. I've seen this kind of error after "optimizing" code like this:



            if(somethingIsTrue()) {
            String message = "Everything is fine";
            System.out.println(message);
            } else {
            String message = "We have an error";
            System.out.println(message);
            }


            "Oh, there's duplicated code, let's pull that common line out" -> and there it it.



            The most common way to deal with this kind of scope-trouble would be to pre-assign the else-values to the variable names in the outside scope and then reassign in if:



            String message = "We have an error";
            if(somethingIsTrue()) {
            message = "Everything is fine";
            }
            System.out.println(message);





            share|improve this answer





















            • 3





              "Java has no free() or delete operators, so it has to rely on tracking variable scope to find out when variables are no longer used (together with references to these variables of cause)." - While true, this not relevant. C and C++ have free / delete operators respectively, and yet the equivalent C / C++ code to your examples would be illegal. C and C++ blocks limit the scope of variables just like in Java. In fact, this is true for most "block structured" languages.

              – Stephen C
              Nov 1 '17 at 13:41













            • The better solution for code that assigns a different value on every branch is to use a blank final variable declaration.

              – Daniel Pryden
              Apr 3 '18 at 13:43



















            8














            One way to get this error in Eclipse :




            1. Define a class A in src/test/java.

            2. Define another class B in src/main/java that uses class A.


            Result : Eclipse will compile the code, but maven will give "Cannot find symbol".



            Underlying cause : Eclipse is using a combined build path for the main and test trees. Unfortunately, it does not support using different build paths for different parts of an Eclipse project, which is what Maven requires.



            Solution :




            1. Don't define your dependencies that way; i.e. don't make this mistake.

            2. Regularly build your codebase using Maven so that you pick up this mistake early. One way to do that is to use a CI server.






            share|improve this answer


























            • What is the solution to this one?

              – user4964330
              Jun 15 '16 at 10:27






            • 2





              whatever you use in src/main/java needs to be defined in src/main/java or in any compile/runtime dependencies (not test dependencies).

              – Joel Costigliola
              Jun 16 '16 at 4:27



















            3














            "Can not find " means that , compiler who can't find appropriate variable, method ,class etc...if you got that error massage , first of all you want to find code line where get error massage..And then you will able to find which variable , method or class have not define before using it.After confirmation initialize that variable ,method or class can be used for later require...Consider the following example.



            I'll create a demo class and print a name...



            class demo{ 
            public static void main(String a){
            System.out.print(name);
            }
            }


            Now look at the result..



            enter image description here



            That error says, "variable name can not find"..Defining and initializing value for 'name' variable can be abolished that error..Actually like this,



            class demo{ 
            public static void main(String a){

            String name="smith";

            System.out.print(name);
            }
            }


            Now look at the new output...



            enter image description here



            Ok Successfully solved that error..At the same time , if you could get "can not find method " or "can not find class" something , At first,define a class or method and after use that..






            share|improve this answer

































              2














              If you're getting this error in the build somewhere else, while your IDE says everything is perfectly fine, then check that you are using the same Java versions in both places.



              For example, Java 7 and Java 8 have different APIs, so calling a non-existent API in an older Java version would cause this error.






              share|improve this answer































                0














                I too was getting this error. (for which I googled and I was directed to this page)



                Problem: I was calling a static method defined in the class of a project A from a class defined in another project B.
                I was getting the following error:



                error: cannot find symbol


                Solution: I resolved this by first building the project where the method is defined then the project where the method was being called from.






                share|improve this answer

































                  0














                  For hints, look closer at the class name name that throws an error and the line number, example:
                  Compilation failure
                  [ERROR] applicationsxxxxx.java:[44,30] error: cannot find symbol



                  One other cause is unsupported method of for java version say jdk7 vs 8.
                  Check your %JAVA_HOME%






                  share|improve this answer
























                  • This just says the same thing that other answers say.

                    – Stephen C
                    Jul 6 '18 at 11:03



















                  0














                  There can be various scenarios as people have mentioned above. A couple of things which have helped me resolve this.





                  1. If you are using IntelliJ



                    File -> 'Invalidate Caches/Restart'




                  OR





                  1. The class being referenced was in another project and that dependency was not added to the Gradle build file of my project. So I added the dependency using



                    compile project(':anotherProject')




                  and it worked. HTH!






                  share|improve this answer

































                    0














                    If eclipse Java build path is mapped to 7, 8 and in Project pom.xml Maven properties java.version is mentioned higher Java version(9,10,11, etc..,) than 7,8 you need to update in pom.xml file.



                    In Eclipse if Java is mapped to Java version 11 and in pom.xml it is mapped to Java version 8. Update Eclipse support to Java 11 by go through below steps in eclipse IDE
                    Help -> Install New Software ->



                    Paste following link http://download.eclipse.org/eclipse/updates/4.9-P-builds at Work With



                    or



                    Add (Popup window will open) ->



                    Name: Java 11 support
                    Location: http://download.eclipse.org/eclipse/updates/4.9-P-builds



                    then update Java version in Maven properties of pom.xml file as below



                    <java.version>11</java.version>
                    <maven.compiler.source>${java.version}</maven.compiler.source>
                    <maven.compiler.target>${java.version}</maven.compiler.target>


                    Finally do right click on project Debug as -> Maven clean, Maven build steps






                    share|improve this answer






















                      protected by Stephen C Jun 16 '15 at 21:27



                      Thank you for your interest in this question.
                      Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



                      Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














                      10 Answers
                      10






                      active

                      oldest

                      votes








                      10 Answers
                      10






                      active

                      oldest

                      votes









                      active

                      oldest

                      votes






                      active

                      oldest

                      votes









                      343














                      1. What does a "Cannot find symbol" error mean?



                      Firstly, it is a compilation error1. It means that either there is a problem in your Java source code, or there is a problem in the way that you are compiling it.



                      Your Java source code consists of the following things:




                      • Keywords: like true, false, class, while, and so on.

                      • Literals: like 42 and 'X' and "Hi mum!".

                      • Operators and other non-alphanumeric tokens: like +, =, {, and so on.

                      • Identifiers: like Reader, i, toString, processEquibalancedElephants, and so on.

                      • Comments and whitespace.


                      A "Cannot find symbol" error is about the identifiers. When your code is compiled, the compiler needs to work out what each and every identifier in your code means.



                      A "Cannot find symbol" error means that the compiler cannot do this. Your code appears to be referring to something that the compiler doesn't understand.



                      2. What can cause a "Cannot find symbol" error?



                      As a first order, there is only one cause. The compiler looked in all of the places where the identifier should be defined, and it couldn't find the definition. This could be caused by a number of things. The common ones are as follows:




                      • For identifiers in general:


                        • Perhaps you spelled the name incorrectly; i.e. StringBiulder instead of StringBuilder. Java cannot and will not attempt to compensate for bad spelling or typing errors.

                        • Perhaps you got the case wrong; i.e. stringBuilder instead of StringBuilder. All Java identifiers are case sensitive.

                        • Perhaps you used underscores inappropriately; i.e. mystring and my_string are different. (If you stick to the Java style rules, you will be largely protected from this mistake ...)

                        • Perhaps you are trying to use something that was declared "somewhere else"; i.e. in a different context to where you have implicitly told the compiler to look. (A different class? A different scope? A different package? A different code-base?)



                      • For identifiers that should refer to variables:


                        • Perhaps you forgot to declare the variable.

                        • Perhaps the variable declaration is out of scope at the point you tried to use it. (See example below)



                      • For identifiers that should be method or field names:


                        • Perhaps you are trying to refer to an inherited method or field that wasn't declared in the parent / ancestor classes or interfaces.

                        • Perhaps you are trying to refer to a method or field that does not exist (i.e. has not been declared) in the type you are using; e.g. "someString".push()2.

                        • Perhaps you are trying to use a method as a field, or vice versa; e.g. "someString".length or someArray.length().




                      • For identifiers that should be class names:




                        • Perhaps you forgot to import the class.

                        • Perhaps you used "star" imports, but the class isn't defined in any of the packages that you imported.


                        • Perhaps you forgot a new as in:



                          String s = String();  // should be 'new String()'





                      • For cases where type or instance doesn't appear to have the member you were expecting it to have:




                        • Perhaps you have declared a nested class or a generic parameter that shadows the type you were meaning to use.

                        • Perhaps you are shadowing a static or instance variable.

                        • Perhaps you imported the wrong type; e.g. due to IDE completion or auto-correction.

                        • Perhaps you are using (compiling against) the wrong version of an API.

                        • Perhaps you forgot to cast your object to an appropriate subclass.




                      The problem is often a combination of the above. For example, maybe you "star" imported java.io.* and then tried to use the Files class ... which is in java.nio not java.io. Or maybe you meant to write File ... which is a class in java.io.





                      Here is an example of how incorrect variable scoping can lead to a "Cannot find symbol" error:



                      for (int i = 0; i < strings.size(); i++) {
                      if (strings.get(i).equalsIgnoreCase("fnoord")) {
                      break;
                      }
                      }
                      if (i < strings.size()) {
                      ...
                      }


                      This will give a "Cannot find symbol" error for i in the if statement. Though we previously declared i, that declaration is only in scope for the for statement and its body. The reference to i in the if statement cannot see that declaration of i. It is out of scope.



                      (An appropriate correction here might be to move the if statement inside the loop, or to declare i before the start of the loop.)





                      Here is an example that causes puzzlement where a typo leads to a seemingly inexplicable "Cannot find symbol" error:



                      for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++); {
                      System.out.println("i is " + i);
                      }


                      This will give you a compilation error in the println call saying that i cannot be found. But (I hear you say) I did declare it!



                      The problem is the sneaky semicolon ( ; ) before the {. The Java language syntax defines a semicolon in that context to be an empty statement. The empty statement then becomes the body of the for loop. So that code actually means this:



                      for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++); 

                      // The previous and following are separate statements!!

                      {
                      System.out.println("i is " + i);
                      }


                      The { ... } block is NOT the body of the for loop, and therefore the previous declaration of i in the for statement is out of scope in the block.





                      Here is another example of "Cannot find symbol" error that is caused by a typo.



                      int tmp = ...
                      int res = tmp(a + b);


                      Despite the previous declaration, the tmp in the tmp(...) expression is erroneous. The compiler will look for a method called tmp, and won't find one. The previously declared tmp is in the namespace for variables, not the namespace for methods.



                      In the example I came across, the programmer had actually left out an operator. What he meant to write was this:



                      int res = tmp * (a + b);




                      There is another reason why the compiler might not find a symbol if you are compiling from the command line. You might simply have forgotten to compile or recompile some other class. For example, if you have classes Foo and Bar where Foo uses Bar. If you have never compiled Bar and you run javac Foo.java, you are liable to find that the compiler can't find the symbol Bar. The simple answer is to compile Foo and Bar together; e.g. javac Foo.java Bar.java or javac *.java. Or better still use a Java build tool; e.g. Ant, Maven, Gradle and so on.



                      There are some other more obscure causes too ... which I will deal with below.



                      3. How do I fix these errors ?



                      Generally speaking, you start out by figuring out what caused the compilation error.




                      • Look at the line in the file indicated by the compilation error message.

                      • Identify which symbol that the error message is talking about.

                      • Figure out why the compiler is saying that it cannot find the symbol; see above!


                      Then you think about what your code is supposed to be saying. Then finally you work out what correction you need to make to your source code to do what you want.



                      Note that not every "correction" is correct. Consider this:



                      for (int i = 1; i < 10; i++) {
                      for (j = 1; j < 10; j++) {
                      ...
                      }
                      }


                      Suppose that the compiler says "Cannot find symbol" for j. There are many ways I could "fix" that:




                      • I could change the inner for to for (int j = 1; j < 10; j++) - probably correct.

                      • I could add a declaration for j before the inner for loop, or the outer for loop - possibly correct.

                      • I could change j to i in the inner for loop - probably wrong!

                      • and so on.


                      The point is that you need to understand what your code is trying to do in order to find the right fix.



                      4. Obscure causes



                      Here are a couple of cases where the "Cannot find symbol" is seemingly inexplicable ... until you look closer.




                      1. Incorrect dependencies: If you are using an IDE or a build tool that manages the build path and project dependencies, you may have made a mistake with the dependencies; e.g. left out a dependency, or selected the wrong version. If you are using a build tool (Ant, Maven, Gradle, etc), check the project's build file. If you are using an IDE, check the project's build path configuration.


                      2. You are not recompiling: It sometimes happens that new Java programmers don't understand how the Java tool chain works, or haven't implemented a repeatable "build process"; e.g. using an IDE, Ant, Maven, Gradle and so on. In such a situation, the programmer can end up chasing his tail looking for an illusory error that is actually caused by not recompiling the code properly, and the like ...


                      3. An earlier build problem: It is possible that an earlier build failed in a way that gave a JAR file with missing classes. Such a failure would typically be noticed if you were using a build tool. However if you are getting JAR files from someone else, you are dependent on them building properly, and noticing errors. If you suspect this, use tar -tvf to list the contents of the suspect JAR file.



                      4. IDE issues: People have reported cases where their IDE gets confused and the compiler in the IDE cannot find a class that exists ... or the reverse situation.




                        • This can happen if the IDE's caches get out of sync with the file system. There are IDE specific ways to fix that.


                        • This could be an IDE bug. For instance @Joel Costigliola describes a scenario where Eclipse does not handle a Maven "test" tree correctly: see this answer.





                      5. Redefining system classes: I've seen cases where the compiler complains that substring is an unknown symbol in something like the following



                        String s = ...
                        String s1 = s.substring(1);


                        It turned out that the programmer had created their own version of String and that his version of the class didn't define a substring methods.



                        Lesson: Don't define your own classes with the same names as common library classes!




                      6. Homoglyphs: If you use UTF-8 encoding for your source files, it is possible to have identifiers that look the same, but are in fact different because they contain homoglyphs. See this page for more information.



                        You can avoid this by restricting yourself to ASCII or Latin-1 as the source file encoding, and using Java uxxxx escapes for other characters.






                      1 - If, perchance, you do see this in a runtime exception or error message, then either you have configured your IDE to run code with compilation errors, or your application is generating and compiling code .. at runtime.



                      2 - The three basic principles of Civil Engineering: water doesn't flow uphill, a plank is stronger on its side, and you can't push on a string.






                      share|improve this answer


























                      • I had another situation where this compilation error occured while eclipse didn't see the problem: Two classes with dependencies defined in the respectively other class. In my case I had an enum, implementing an interface, defined in a class where I foolishly already used the enum.

                        – Jogi
                        May 23 '16 at 7:28













                      • Somewhat similarly to the comment above, when I compile and run my program from Eclipse it works no problem. Compiling it from the console raises a bunch of these "Cannot find symbol" errors often related to last element in an import. I have no idea what is causing this as there is nothing wrong in the code really.

                        – Andres Stadelmann
                        May 27 '16 at 16:42











                      • People new to Java are sometimes mixing up array types with their component types, for instance String strings = { "hello", "world" }; strings.chatAt(3);.

                        – MC Emperor
                        Aug 13 '18 at 11:14
















                      343














                      1. What does a "Cannot find symbol" error mean?



                      Firstly, it is a compilation error1. It means that either there is a problem in your Java source code, or there is a problem in the way that you are compiling it.



                      Your Java source code consists of the following things:




                      • Keywords: like true, false, class, while, and so on.

                      • Literals: like 42 and 'X' and "Hi mum!".

                      • Operators and other non-alphanumeric tokens: like +, =, {, and so on.

                      • Identifiers: like Reader, i, toString, processEquibalancedElephants, and so on.

                      • Comments and whitespace.


                      A "Cannot find symbol" error is about the identifiers. When your code is compiled, the compiler needs to work out what each and every identifier in your code means.



                      A "Cannot find symbol" error means that the compiler cannot do this. Your code appears to be referring to something that the compiler doesn't understand.



                      2. What can cause a "Cannot find symbol" error?



                      As a first order, there is only one cause. The compiler looked in all of the places where the identifier should be defined, and it couldn't find the definition. This could be caused by a number of things. The common ones are as follows:




                      • For identifiers in general:


                        • Perhaps you spelled the name incorrectly; i.e. StringBiulder instead of StringBuilder. Java cannot and will not attempt to compensate for bad spelling or typing errors.

                        • Perhaps you got the case wrong; i.e. stringBuilder instead of StringBuilder. All Java identifiers are case sensitive.

                        • Perhaps you used underscores inappropriately; i.e. mystring and my_string are different. (If you stick to the Java style rules, you will be largely protected from this mistake ...)

                        • Perhaps you are trying to use something that was declared "somewhere else"; i.e. in a different context to where you have implicitly told the compiler to look. (A different class? A different scope? A different package? A different code-base?)



                      • For identifiers that should refer to variables:


                        • Perhaps you forgot to declare the variable.

                        • Perhaps the variable declaration is out of scope at the point you tried to use it. (See example below)



                      • For identifiers that should be method or field names:


                        • Perhaps you are trying to refer to an inherited method or field that wasn't declared in the parent / ancestor classes or interfaces.

                        • Perhaps you are trying to refer to a method or field that does not exist (i.e. has not been declared) in the type you are using; e.g. "someString".push()2.

                        • Perhaps you are trying to use a method as a field, or vice versa; e.g. "someString".length or someArray.length().




                      • For identifiers that should be class names:




                        • Perhaps you forgot to import the class.

                        • Perhaps you used "star" imports, but the class isn't defined in any of the packages that you imported.


                        • Perhaps you forgot a new as in:



                          String s = String();  // should be 'new String()'





                      • For cases where type or instance doesn't appear to have the member you were expecting it to have:




                        • Perhaps you have declared a nested class or a generic parameter that shadows the type you were meaning to use.

                        • Perhaps you are shadowing a static or instance variable.

                        • Perhaps you imported the wrong type; e.g. due to IDE completion or auto-correction.

                        • Perhaps you are using (compiling against) the wrong version of an API.

                        • Perhaps you forgot to cast your object to an appropriate subclass.




                      The problem is often a combination of the above. For example, maybe you "star" imported java.io.* and then tried to use the Files class ... which is in java.nio not java.io. Or maybe you meant to write File ... which is a class in java.io.





                      Here is an example of how incorrect variable scoping can lead to a "Cannot find symbol" error:



                      for (int i = 0; i < strings.size(); i++) {
                      if (strings.get(i).equalsIgnoreCase("fnoord")) {
                      break;
                      }
                      }
                      if (i < strings.size()) {
                      ...
                      }


                      This will give a "Cannot find symbol" error for i in the if statement. Though we previously declared i, that declaration is only in scope for the for statement and its body. The reference to i in the if statement cannot see that declaration of i. It is out of scope.



                      (An appropriate correction here might be to move the if statement inside the loop, or to declare i before the start of the loop.)





                      Here is an example that causes puzzlement where a typo leads to a seemingly inexplicable "Cannot find symbol" error:



                      for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++); {
                      System.out.println("i is " + i);
                      }


                      This will give you a compilation error in the println call saying that i cannot be found. But (I hear you say) I did declare it!



                      The problem is the sneaky semicolon ( ; ) before the {. The Java language syntax defines a semicolon in that context to be an empty statement. The empty statement then becomes the body of the for loop. So that code actually means this:



                      for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++); 

                      // The previous and following are separate statements!!

                      {
                      System.out.println("i is " + i);
                      }


                      The { ... } block is NOT the body of the for loop, and therefore the previous declaration of i in the for statement is out of scope in the block.





                      Here is another example of "Cannot find symbol" error that is caused by a typo.



                      int tmp = ...
                      int res = tmp(a + b);


                      Despite the previous declaration, the tmp in the tmp(...) expression is erroneous. The compiler will look for a method called tmp, and won't find one. The previously declared tmp is in the namespace for variables, not the namespace for methods.



                      In the example I came across, the programmer had actually left out an operator. What he meant to write was this:



                      int res = tmp * (a + b);




                      There is another reason why the compiler might not find a symbol if you are compiling from the command line. You might simply have forgotten to compile or recompile some other class. For example, if you have classes Foo and Bar where Foo uses Bar. If you have never compiled Bar and you run javac Foo.java, you are liable to find that the compiler can't find the symbol Bar. The simple answer is to compile Foo and Bar together; e.g. javac Foo.java Bar.java or javac *.java. Or better still use a Java build tool; e.g. Ant, Maven, Gradle and so on.



                      There are some other more obscure causes too ... which I will deal with below.



                      3. How do I fix these errors ?



                      Generally speaking, you start out by figuring out what caused the compilation error.




                      • Look at the line in the file indicated by the compilation error message.

                      • Identify which symbol that the error message is talking about.

                      • Figure out why the compiler is saying that it cannot find the symbol; see above!


                      Then you think about what your code is supposed to be saying. Then finally you work out what correction you need to make to your source code to do what you want.



                      Note that not every "correction" is correct. Consider this:



                      for (int i = 1; i < 10; i++) {
                      for (j = 1; j < 10; j++) {
                      ...
                      }
                      }


                      Suppose that the compiler says "Cannot find symbol" for j. There are many ways I could "fix" that:




                      • I could change the inner for to for (int j = 1; j < 10; j++) - probably correct.

                      • I could add a declaration for j before the inner for loop, or the outer for loop - possibly correct.

                      • I could change j to i in the inner for loop - probably wrong!

                      • and so on.


                      The point is that you need to understand what your code is trying to do in order to find the right fix.



                      4. Obscure causes



                      Here are a couple of cases where the "Cannot find symbol" is seemingly inexplicable ... until you look closer.




                      1. Incorrect dependencies: If you are using an IDE or a build tool that manages the build path and project dependencies, you may have made a mistake with the dependencies; e.g. left out a dependency, or selected the wrong version. If you are using a build tool (Ant, Maven, Gradle, etc), check the project's build file. If you are using an IDE, check the project's build path configuration.


                      2. You are not recompiling: It sometimes happens that new Java programmers don't understand how the Java tool chain works, or haven't implemented a repeatable "build process"; e.g. using an IDE, Ant, Maven, Gradle and so on. In such a situation, the programmer can end up chasing his tail looking for an illusory error that is actually caused by not recompiling the code properly, and the like ...


                      3. An earlier build problem: It is possible that an earlier build failed in a way that gave a JAR file with missing classes. Such a failure would typically be noticed if you were using a build tool. However if you are getting JAR files from someone else, you are dependent on them building properly, and noticing errors. If you suspect this, use tar -tvf to list the contents of the suspect JAR file.



                      4. IDE issues: People have reported cases where their IDE gets confused and the compiler in the IDE cannot find a class that exists ... or the reverse situation.




                        • This can happen if the IDE's caches get out of sync with the file system. There are IDE specific ways to fix that.


                        • This could be an IDE bug. For instance @Joel Costigliola describes a scenario where Eclipse does not handle a Maven "test" tree correctly: see this answer.





                      5. Redefining system classes: I've seen cases where the compiler complains that substring is an unknown symbol in something like the following



                        String s = ...
                        String s1 = s.substring(1);


                        It turned out that the programmer had created their own version of String and that his version of the class didn't define a substring methods.



                        Lesson: Don't define your own classes with the same names as common library classes!




                      6. Homoglyphs: If you use UTF-8 encoding for your source files, it is possible to have identifiers that look the same, but are in fact different because they contain homoglyphs. See this page for more information.



                        You can avoid this by restricting yourself to ASCII or Latin-1 as the source file encoding, and using Java uxxxx escapes for other characters.






                      1 - If, perchance, you do see this in a runtime exception or error message, then either you have configured your IDE to run code with compilation errors, or your application is generating and compiling code .. at runtime.



                      2 - The three basic principles of Civil Engineering: water doesn't flow uphill, a plank is stronger on its side, and you can't push on a string.






                      share|improve this answer


























                      • I had another situation where this compilation error occured while eclipse didn't see the problem: Two classes with dependencies defined in the respectively other class. In my case I had an enum, implementing an interface, defined in a class where I foolishly already used the enum.

                        – Jogi
                        May 23 '16 at 7:28













                      • Somewhat similarly to the comment above, when I compile and run my program from Eclipse it works no problem. Compiling it from the console raises a bunch of these "Cannot find symbol" errors often related to last element in an import. I have no idea what is causing this as there is nothing wrong in the code really.

                        – Andres Stadelmann
                        May 27 '16 at 16:42











                      • People new to Java are sometimes mixing up array types with their component types, for instance String strings = { "hello", "world" }; strings.chatAt(3);.

                        – MC Emperor
                        Aug 13 '18 at 11:14














                      343












                      343








                      343







                      1. What does a "Cannot find symbol" error mean?



                      Firstly, it is a compilation error1. It means that either there is a problem in your Java source code, or there is a problem in the way that you are compiling it.



                      Your Java source code consists of the following things:




                      • Keywords: like true, false, class, while, and so on.

                      • Literals: like 42 and 'X' and "Hi mum!".

                      • Operators and other non-alphanumeric tokens: like +, =, {, and so on.

                      • Identifiers: like Reader, i, toString, processEquibalancedElephants, and so on.

                      • Comments and whitespace.


                      A "Cannot find symbol" error is about the identifiers. When your code is compiled, the compiler needs to work out what each and every identifier in your code means.



                      A "Cannot find symbol" error means that the compiler cannot do this. Your code appears to be referring to something that the compiler doesn't understand.



                      2. What can cause a "Cannot find symbol" error?



                      As a first order, there is only one cause. The compiler looked in all of the places where the identifier should be defined, and it couldn't find the definition. This could be caused by a number of things. The common ones are as follows:




                      • For identifiers in general:


                        • Perhaps you spelled the name incorrectly; i.e. StringBiulder instead of StringBuilder. Java cannot and will not attempt to compensate for bad spelling or typing errors.

                        • Perhaps you got the case wrong; i.e. stringBuilder instead of StringBuilder. All Java identifiers are case sensitive.

                        • Perhaps you used underscores inappropriately; i.e. mystring and my_string are different. (If you stick to the Java style rules, you will be largely protected from this mistake ...)

                        • Perhaps you are trying to use something that was declared "somewhere else"; i.e. in a different context to where you have implicitly told the compiler to look. (A different class? A different scope? A different package? A different code-base?)



                      • For identifiers that should refer to variables:


                        • Perhaps you forgot to declare the variable.

                        • Perhaps the variable declaration is out of scope at the point you tried to use it. (See example below)



                      • For identifiers that should be method or field names:


                        • Perhaps you are trying to refer to an inherited method or field that wasn't declared in the parent / ancestor classes or interfaces.

                        • Perhaps you are trying to refer to a method or field that does not exist (i.e. has not been declared) in the type you are using; e.g. "someString".push()2.

                        • Perhaps you are trying to use a method as a field, or vice versa; e.g. "someString".length or someArray.length().




                      • For identifiers that should be class names:




                        • Perhaps you forgot to import the class.

                        • Perhaps you used "star" imports, but the class isn't defined in any of the packages that you imported.


                        • Perhaps you forgot a new as in:



                          String s = String();  // should be 'new String()'





                      • For cases where type or instance doesn't appear to have the member you were expecting it to have:




                        • Perhaps you have declared a nested class or a generic parameter that shadows the type you were meaning to use.

                        • Perhaps you are shadowing a static or instance variable.

                        • Perhaps you imported the wrong type; e.g. due to IDE completion or auto-correction.

                        • Perhaps you are using (compiling against) the wrong version of an API.

                        • Perhaps you forgot to cast your object to an appropriate subclass.




                      The problem is often a combination of the above. For example, maybe you "star" imported java.io.* and then tried to use the Files class ... which is in java.nio not java.io. Or maybe you meant to write File ... which is a class in java.io.





                      Here is an example of how incorrect variable scoping can lead to a "Cannot find symbol" error:



                      for (int i = 0; i < strings.size(); i++) {
                      if (strings.get(i).equalsIgnoreCase("fnoord")) {
                      break;
                      }
                      }
                      if (i < strings.size()) {
                      ...
                      }


                      This will give a "Cannot find symbol" error for i in the if statement. Though we previously declared i, that declaration is only in scope for the for statement and its body. The reference to i in the if statement cannot see that declaration of i. It is out of scope.



                      (An appropriate correction here might be to move the if statement inside the loop, or to declare i before the start of the loop.)





                      Here is an example that causes puzzlement where a typo leads to a seemingly inexplicable "Cannot find symbol" error:



                      for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++); {
                      System.out.println("i is " + i);
                      }


                      This will give you a compilation error in the println call saying that i cannot be found. But (I hear you say) I did declare it!



                      The problem is the sneaky semicolon ( ; ) before the {. The Java language syntax defines a semicolon in that context to be an empty statement. The empty statement then becomes the body of the for loop. So that code actually means this:



                      for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++); 

                      // The previous and following are separate statements!!

                      {
                      System.out.println("i is " + i);
                      }


                      The { ... } block is NOT the body of the for loop, and therefore the previous declaration of i in the for statement is out of scope in the block.





                      Here is another example of "Cannot find symbol" error that is caused by a typo.



                      int tmp = ...
                      int res = tmp(a + b);


                      Despite the previous declaration, the tmp in the tmp(...) expression is erroneous. The compiler will look for a method called tmp, and won't find one. The previously declared tmp is in the namespace for variables, not the namespace for methods.



                      In the example I came across, the programmer had actually left out an operator. What he meant to write was this:



                      int res = tmp * (a + b);




                      There is another reason why the compiler might not find a symbol if you are compiling from the command line. You might simply have forgotten to compile or recompile some other class. For example, if you have classes Foo and Bar where Foo uses Bar. If you have never compiled Bar and you run javac Foo.java, you are liable to find that the compiler can't find the symbol Bar. The simple answer is to compile Foo and Bar together; e.g. javac Foo.java Bar.java or javac *.java. Or better still use a Java build tool; e.g. Ant, Maven, Gradle and so on.



                      There are some other more obscure causes too ... which I will deal with below.



                      3. How do I fix these errors ?



                      Generally speaking, you start out by figuring out what caused the compilation error.




                      • Look at the line in the file indicated by the compilation error message.

                      • Identify which symbol that the error message is talking about.

                      • Figure out why the compiler is saying that it cannot find the symbol; see above!


                      Then you think about what your code is supposed to be saying. Then finally you work out what correction you need to make to your source code to do what you want.



                      Note that not every "correction" is correct. Consider this:



                      for (int i = 1; i < 10; i++) {
                      for (j = 1; j < 10; j++) {
                      ...
                      }
                      }


                      Suppose that the compiler says "Cannot find symbol" for j. There are many ways I could "fix" that:




                      • I could change the inner for to for (int j = 1; j < 10; j++) - probably correct.

                      • I could add a declaration for j before the inner for loop, or the outer for loop - possibly correct.

                      • I could change j to i in the inner for loop - probably wrong!

                      • and so on.


                      The point is that you need to understand what your code is trying to do in order to find the right fix.



                      4. Obscure causes



                      Here are a couple of cases where the "Cannot find symbol" is seemingly inexplicable ... until you look closer.




                      1. Incorrect dependencies: If you are using an IDE or a build tool that manages the build path and project dependencies, you may have made a mistake with the dependencies; e.g. left out a dependency, or selected the wrong version. If you are using a build tool (Ant, Maven, Gradle, etc), check the project's build file. If you are using an IDE, check the project's build path configuration.


                      2. You are not recompiling: It sometimes happens that new Java programmers don't understand how the Java tool chain works, or haven't implemented a repeatable "build process"; e.g. using an IDE, Ant, Maven, Gradle and so on. In such a situation, the programmer can end up chasing his tail looking for an illusory error that is actually caused by not recompiling the code properly, and the like ...


                      3. An earlier build problem: It is possible that an earlier build failed in a way that gave a JAR file with missing classes. Such a failure would typically be noticed if you were using a build tool. However if you are getting JAR files from someone else, you are dependent on them building properly, and noticing errors. If you suspect this, use tar -tvf to list the contents of the suspect JAR file.



                      4. IDE issues: People have reported cases where their IDE gets confused and the compiler in the IDE cannot find a class that exists ... or the reverse situation.




                        • This can happen if the IDE's caches get out of sync with the file system. There are IDE specific ways to fix that.


                        • This could be an IDE bug. For instance @Joel Costigliola describes a scenario where Eclipse does not handle a Maven "test" tree correctly: see this answer.





                      5. Redefining system classes: I've seen cases where the compiler complains that substring is an unknown symbol in something like the following



                        String s = ...
                        String s1 = s.substring(1);


                        It turned out that the programmer had created their own version of String and that his version of the class didn't define a substring methods.



                        Lesson: Don't define your own classes with the same names as common library classes!




                      6. Homoglyphs: If you use UTF-8 encoding for your source files, it is possible to have identifiers that look the same, but are in fact different because they contain homoglyphs. See this page for more information.



                        You can avoid this by restricting yourself to ASCII or Latin-1 as the source file encoding, and using Java uxxxx escapes for other characters.






                      1 - If, perchance, you do see this in a runtime exception or error message, then either you have configured your IDE to run code with compilation errors, or your application is generating and compiling code .. at runtime.



                      2 - The three basic principles of Civil Engineering: water doesn't flow uphill, a plank is stronger on its side, and you can't push on a string.






                      share|improve this answer















                      1. What does a "Cannot find symbol" error mean?



                      Firstly, it is a compilation error1. It means that either there is a problem in your Java source code, or there is a problem in the way that you are compiling it.



                      Your Java source code consists of the following things:




                      • Keywords: like true, false, class, while, and so on.

                      • Literals: like 42 and 'X' and "Hi mum!".

                      • Operators and other non-alphanumeric tokens: like +, =, {, and so on.

                      • Identifiers: like Reader, i, toString, processEquibalancedElephants, and so on.

                      • Comments and whitespace.


                      A "Cannot find symbol" error is about the identifiers. When your code is compiled, the compiler needs to work out what each and every identifier in your code means.



                      A "Cannot find symbol" error means that the compiler cannot do this. Your code appears to be referring to something that the compiler doesn't understand.



                      2. What can cause a "Cannot find symbol" error?



                      As a first order, there is only one cause. The compiler looked in all of the places where the identifier should be defined, and it couldn't find the definition. This could be caused by a number of things. The common ones are as follows:




                      • For identifiers in general:


                        • Perhaps you spelled the name incorrectly; i.e. StringBiulder instead of StringBuilder. Java cannot and will not attempt to compensate for bad spelling or typing errors.

                        • Perhaps you got the case wrong; i.e. stringBuilder instead of StringBuilder. All Java identifiers are case sensitive.

                        • Perhaps you used underscores inappropriately; i.e. mystring and my_string are different. (If you stick to the Java style rules, you will be largely protected from this mistake ...)

                        • Perhaps you are trying to use something that was declared "somewhere else"; i.e. in a different context to where you have implicitly told the compiler to look. (A different class? A different scope? A different package? A different code-base?)



                      • For identifiers that should refer to variables:


                        • Perhaps you forgot to declare the variable.

                        • Perhaps the variable declaration is out of scope at the point you tried to use it. (See example below)



                      • For identifiers that should be method or field names:


                        • Perhaps you are trying to refer to an inherited method or field that wasn't declared in the parent / ancestor classes or interfaces.

                        • Perhaps you are trying to refer to a method or field that does not exist (i.e. has not been declared) in the type you are using; e.g. "someString".push()2.

                        • Perhaps you are trying to use a method as a field, or vice versa; e.g. "someString".length or someArray.length().




                      • For identifiers that should be class names:




                        • Perhaps you forgot to import the class.

                        • Perhaps you used "star" imports, but the class isn't defined in any of the packages that you imported.


                        • Perhaps you forgot a new as in:



                          String s = String();  // should be 'new String()'





                      • For cases where type or instance doesn't appear to have the member you were expecting it to have:




                        • Perhaps you have declared a nested class or a generic parameter that shadows the type you were meaning to use.

                        • Perhaps you are shadowing a static or instance variable.

                        • Perhaps you imported the wrong type; e.g. due to IDE completion or auto-correction.

                        • Perhaps you are using (compiling against) the wrong version of an API.

                        • Perhaps you forgot to cast your object to an appropriate subclass.




                      The problem is often a combination of the above. For example, maybe you "star" imported java.io.* and then tried to use the Files class ... which is in java.nio not java.io. Or maybe you meant to write File ... which is a class in java.io.





                      Here is an example of how incorrect variable scoping can lead to a "Cannot find symbol" error:



                      for (int i = 0; i < strings.size(); i++) {
                      if (strings.get(i).equalsIgnoreCase("fnoord")) {
                      break;
                      }
                      }
                      if (i < strings.size()) {
                      ...
                      }


                      This will give a "Cannot find symbol" error for i in the if statement. Though we previously declared i, that declaration is only in scope for the for statement and its body. The reference to i in the if statement cannot see that declaration of i. It is out of scope.



                      (An appropriate correction here might be to move the if statement inside the loop, or to declare i before the start of the loop.)





                      Here is an example that causes puzzlement where a typo leads to a seemingly inexplicable "Cannot find symbol" error:



                      for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++); {
                      System.out.println("i is " + i);
                      }


                      This will give you a compilation error in the println call saying that i cannot be found. But (I hear you say) I did declare it!



                      The problem is the sneaky semicolon ( ; ) before the {. The Java language syntax defines a semicolon in that context to be an empty statement. The empty statement then becomes the body of the for loop. So that code actually means this:



                      for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++); 

                      // The previous and following are separate statements!!

                      {
                      System.out.println("i is " + i);
                      }


                      The { ... } block is NOT the body of the for loop, and therefore the previous declaration of i in the for statement is out of scope in the block.





                      Here is another example of "Cannot find symbol" error that is caused by a typo.



                      int tmp = ...
                      int res = tmp(a + b);


                      Despite the previous declaration, the tmp in the tmp(...) expression is erroneous. The compiler will look for a method called tmp, and won't find one. The previously declared tmp is in the namespace for variables, not the namespace for methods.



                      In the example I came across, the programmer had actually left out an operator. What he meant to write was this:



                      int res = tmp * (a + b);




                      There is another reason why the compiler might not find a symbol if you are compiling from the command line. You might simply have forgotten to compile or recompile some other class. For example, if you have classes Foo and Bar where Foo uses Bar. If you have never compiled Bar and you run javac Foo.java, you are liable to find that the compiler can't find the symbol Bar. The simple answer is to compile Foo and Bar together; e.g. javac Foo.java Bar.java or javac *.java. Or better still use a Java build tool; e.g. Ant, Maven, Gradle and so on.



                      There are some other more obscure causes too ... which I will deal with below.



                      3. How do I fix these errors ?



                      Generally speaking, you start out by figuring out what caused the compilation error.




                      • Look at the line in the file indicated by the compilation error message.

                      • Identify which symbol that the error message is talking about.

                      • Figure out why the compiler is saying that it cannot find the symbol; see above!


                      Then you think about what your code is supposed to be saying. Then finally you work out what correction you need to make to your source code to do what you want.



                      Note that not every "correction" is correct. Consider this:



                      for (int i = 1; i < 10; i++) {
                      for (j = 1; j < 10; j++) {
                      ...
                      }
                      }


                      Suppose that the compiler says "Cannot find symbol" for j. There are many ways I could "fix" that:




                      • I could change the inner for to for (int j = 1; j < 10; j++) - probably correct.

                      • I could add a declaration for j before the inner for loop, or the outer for loop - possibly correct.

                      • I could change j to i in the inner for loop - probably wrong!

                      • and so on.


                      The point is that you need to understand what your code is trying to do in order to find the right fix.



                      4. Obscure causes



                      Here are a couple of cases where the "Cannot find symbol" is seemingly inexplicable ... until you look closer.




                      1. Incorrect dependencies: If you are using an IDE or a build tool that manages the build path and project dependencies, you may have made a mistake with the dependencies; e.g. left out a dependency, or selected the wrong version. If you are using a build tool (Ant, Maven, Gradle, etc), check the project's build file. If you are using an IDE, check the project's build path configuration.


                      2. You are not recompiling: It sometimes happens that new Java programmers don't understand how the Java tool chain works, or haven't implemented a repeatable "build process"; e.g. using an IDE, Ant, Maven, Gradle and so on. In such a situation, the programmer can end up chasing his tail looking for an illusory error that is actually caused by not recompiling the code properly, and the like ...


                      3. An earlier build problem: It is possible that an earlier build failed in a way that gave a JAR file with missing classes. Such a failure would typically be noticed if you were using a build tool. However if you are getting JAR files from someone else, you are dependent on them building properly, and noticing errors. If you suspect this, use tar -tvf to list the contents of the suspect JAR file.



                      4. IDE issues: People have reported cases where their IDE gets confused and the compiler in the IDE cannot find a class that exists ... or the reverse situation.




                        • This can happen if the IDE's caches get out of sync with the file system. There are IDE specific ways to fix that.


                        • This could be an IDE bug. For instance @Joel Costigliola describes a scenario where Eclipse does not handle a Maven "test" tree correctly: see this answer.





                      5. Redefining system classes: I've seen cases where the compiler complains that substring is an unknown symbol in something like the following



                        String s = ...
                        String s1 = s.substring(1);


                        It turned out that the programmer had created their own version of String and that his version of the class didn't define a substring methods.



                        Lesson: Don't define your own classes with the same names as common library classes!




                      6. Homoglyphs: If you use UTF-8 encoding for your source files, it is possible to have identifiers that look the same, but are in fact different because they contain homoglyphs. See this page for more information.



                        You can avoid this by restricting yourself to ASCII or Latin-1 as the source file encoding, and using Java uxxxx escapes for other characters.






                      1 - If, perchance, you do see this in a runtime exception or error message, then either you have configured your IDE to run code with compilation errors, or your application is generating and compiling code .. at runtime.



                      2 - The three basic principles of Civil Engineering: water doesn't flow uphill, a plank is stronger on its side, and you can't push on a string.







                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited Oct 31 '18 at 1:51

























                      answered Sep 7 '14 at 1:12









                      Stephen CStephen C

                      526k72586944




                      526k72586944













                      • I had another situation where this compilation error occured while eclipse didn't see the problem: Two classes with dependencies defined in the respectively other class. In my case I had an enum, implementing an interface, defined in a class where I foolishly already used the enum.

                        – Jogi
                        May 23 '16 at 7:28













                      • Somewhat similarly to the comment above, when I compile and run my program from Eclipse it works no problem. Compiling it from the console raises a bunch of these "Cannot find symbol" errors often related to last element in an import. I have no idea what is causing this as there is nothing wrong in the code really.

                        – Andres Stadelmann
                        May 27 '16 at 16:42











                      • People new to Java are sometimes mixing up array types with their component types, for instance String strings = { "hello", "world" }; strings.chatAt(3);.

                        – MC Emperor
                        Aug 13 '18 at 11:14



















                      • I had another situation where this compilation error occured while eclipse didn't see the problem: Two classes with dependencies defined in the respectively other class. In my case I had an enum, implementing an interface, defined in a class where I foolishly already used the enum.

                        – Jogi
                        May 23 '16 at 7:28













                      • Somewhat similarly to the comment above, when I compile and run my program from Eclipse it works no problem. Compiling it from the console raises a bunch of these "Cannot find symbol" errors often related to last element in an import. I have no idea what is causing this as there is nothing wrong in the code really.

                        – Andres Stadelmann
                        May 27 '16 at 16:42











                      • People new to Java are sometimes mixing up array types with their component types, for instance String strings = { "hello", "world" }; strings.chatAt(3);.

                        – MC Emperor
                        Aug 13 '18 at 11:14

















                      I had another situation where this compilation error occured while eclipse didn't see the problem: Two classes with dependencies defined in the respectively other class. In my case I had an enum, implementing an interface, defined in a class where I foolishly already used the enum.

                      – Jogi
                      May 23 '16 at 7:28







                      I had another situation where this compilation error occured while eclipse didn't see the problem: Two classes with dependencies defined in the respectively other class. In my case I had an enum, implementing an interface, defined in a class where I foolishly already used the enum.

                      – Jogi
                      May 23 '16 at 7:28















                      Somewhat similarly to the comment above, when I compile and run my program from Eclipse it works no problem. Compiling it from the console raises a bunch of these "Cannot find symbol" errors often related to last element in an import. I have no idea what is causing this as there is nothing wrong in the code really.

                      – Andres Stadelmann
                      May 27 '16 at 16:42





                      Somewhat similarly to the comment above, when I compile and run my program from Eclipse it works no problem. Compiling it from the console raises a bunch of these "Cannot find symbol" errors often related to last element in an import. I have no idea what is causing this as there is nothing wrong in the code really.

                      – Andres Stadelmann
                      May 27 '16 at 16:42













                      People new to Java are sometimes mixing up array types with their component types, for instance String strings = { "hello", "world" }; strings.chatAt(3);.

                      – MC Emperor
                      Aug 13 '18 at 11:14





                      People new to Java are sometimes mixing up array types with their component types, for instance String strings = { "hello", "world" }; strings.chatAt(3);.

                      – MC Emperor
                      Aug 13 '18 at 11:14













                      21














                      You'll also get this error if you forget a new:



                      String s = String();


                      versus



                      String s = new String();





                      share|improve this answer




























                        21














                        You'll also get this error if you forget a new:



                        String s = String();


                        versus



                        String s = new String();





                        share|improve this answer


























                          21












                          21








                          21







                          You'll also get this error if you forget a new:



                          String s = String();


                          versus



                          String s = new String();





                          share|improve this answer













                          You'll also get this error if you forget a new:



                          String s = String();


                          versus



                          String s = new String();






                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered Apr 17 '15 at 8:50









                          thinkterrythinkterry

                          3951410




                          3951410























                              14














                              One more example of 'Variable is out of scope'



                              As I've seen that kind of questions a few times already, maybe one more example to what's illegal even if it might feel okay.



                              Consider this code:



                              if(somethingIsTrue()) {
                              String message = "Everything is fine";
                              } else {
                              String message = "We have an error";
                              }
                              System.out.println(message);


                              That's invalid code. Because neither of the variables named message is visible outside of their respective scope - which would be the surrounding brackets {} in this case.



                              You might say: "But a variable named message is defined either way - so message is defined after the if".



                              But you'd be wrong.



                              Java has no free() or delete operators, so it has to rely on tracking variable scope to find out when variables are no longer used (together with references to these variables of cause).



                              It's especially bad if you thought you did something good. I've seen this kind of error after "optimizing" code like this:



                              if(somethingIsTrue()) {
                              String message = "Everything is fine";
                              System.out.println(message);
                              } else {
                              String message = "We have an error";
                              System.out.println(message);
                              }


                              "Oh, there's duplicated code, let's pull that common line out" -> and there it it.



                              The most common way to deal with this kind of scope-trouble would be to pre-assign the else-values to the variable names in the outside scope and then reassign in if:



                              String message = "We have an error";
                              if(somethingIsTrue()) {
                              message = "Everything is fine";
                              }
                              System.out.println(message);





                              share|improve this answer





















                              • 3





                                "Java has no free() or delete operators, so it has to rely on tracking variable scope to find out when variables are no longer used (together with references to these variables of cause)." - While true, this not relevant. C and C++ have free / delete operators respectively, and yet the equivalent C / C++ code to your examples would be illegal. C and C++ blocks limit the scope of variables just like in Java. In fact, this is true for most "block structured" languages.

                                – Stephen C
                                Nov 1 '17 at 13:41













                              • The better solution for code that assigns a different value on every branch is to use a blank final variable declaration.

                                – Daniel Pryden
                                Apr 3 '18 at 13:43
















                              14














                              One more example of 'Variable is out of scope'



                              As I've seen that kind of questions a few times already, maybe one more example to what's illegal even if it might feel okay.



                              Consider this code:



                              if(somethingIsTrue()) {
                              String message = "Everything is fine";
                              } else {
                              String message = "We have an error";
                              }
                              System.out.println(message);


                              That's invalid code. Because neither of the variables named message is visible outside of their respective scope - which would be the surrounding brackets {} in this case.



                              You might say: "But a variable named message is defined either way - so message is defined after the if".



                              But you'd be wrong.



                              Java has no free() or delete operators, so it has to rely on tracking variable scope to find out when variables are no longer used (together with references to these variables of cause).



                              It's especially bad if you thought you did something good. I've seen this kind of error after "optimizing" code like this:



                              if(somethingIsTrue()) {
                              String message = "Everything is fine";
                              System.out.println(message);
                              } else {
                              String message = "We have an error";
                              System.out.println(message);
                              }


                              "Oh, there's duplicated code, let's pull that common line out" -> and there it it.



                              The most common way to deal with this kind of scope-trouble would be to pre-assign the else-values to the variable names in the outside scope and then reassign in if:



                              String message = "We have an error";
                              if(somethingIsTrue()) {
                              message = "Everything is fine";
                              }
                              System.out.println(message);





                              share|improve this answer





















                              • 3





                                "Java has no free() or delete operators, so it has to rely on tracking variable scope to find out when variables are no longer used (together with references to these variables of cause)." - While true, this not relevant. C and C++ have free / delete operators respectively, and yet the equivalent C / C++ code to your examples would be illegal. C and C++ blocks limit the scope of variables just like in Java. In fact, this is true for most "block structured" languages.

                                – Stephen C
                                Nov 1 '17 at 13:41













                              • The better solution for code that assigns a different value on every branch is to use a blank final variable declaration.

                                – Daniel Pryden
                                Apr 3 '18 at 13:43














                              14












                              14








                              14







                              One more example of 'Variable is out of scope'



                              As I've seen that kind of questions a few times already, maybe one more example to what's illegal even if it might feel okay.



                              Consider this code:



                              if(somethingIsTrue()) {
                              String message = "Everything is fine";
                              } else {
                              String message = "We have an error";
                              }
                              System.out.println(message);


                              That's invalid code. Because neither of the variables named message is visible outside of their respective scope - which would be the surrounding brackets {} in this case.



                              You might say: "But a variable named message is defined either way - so message is defined after the if".



                              But you'd be wrong.



                              Java has no free() or delete operators, so it has to rely on tracking variable scope to find out when variables are no longer used (together with references to these variables of cause).



                              It's especially bad if you thought you did something good. I've seen this kind of error after "optimizing" code like this:



                              if(somethingIsTrue()) {
                              String message = "Everything is fine";
                              System.out.println(message);
                              } else {
                              String message = "We have an error";
                              System.out.println(message);
                              }


                              "Oh, there's duplicated code, let's pull that common line out" -> and there it it.



                              The most common way to deal with this kind of scope-trouble would be to pre-assign the else-values to the variable names in the outside scope and then reassign in if:



                              String message = "We have an error";
                              if(somethingIsTrue()) {
                              message = "Everything is fine";
                              }
                              System.out.println(message);





                              share|improve this answer















                              One more example of 'Variable is out of scope'



                              As I've seen that kind of questions a few times already, maybe one more example to what's illegal even if it might feel okay.



                              Consider this code:



                              if(somethingIsTrue()) {
                              String message = "Everything is fine";
                              } else {
                              String message = "We have an error";
                              }
                              System.out.println(message);


                              That's invalid code. Because neither of the variables named message is visible outside of their respective scope - which would be the surrounding brackets {} in this case.



                              You might say: "But a variable named message is defined either way - so message is defined after the if".



                              But you'd be wrong.



                              Java has no free() or delete operators, so it has to rely on tracking variable scope to find out when variables are no longer used (together with references to these variables of cause).



                              It's especially bad if you thought you did something good. I've seen this kind of error after "optimizing" code like this:



                              if(somethingIsTrue()) {
                              String message = "Everything is fine";
                              System.out.println(message);
                              } else {
                              String message = "We have an error";
                              System.out.println(message);
                              }


                              "Oh, there's duplicated code, let's pull that common line out" -> and there it it.



                              The most common way to deal with this kind of scope-trouble would be to pre-assign the else-values to the variable names in the outside scope and then reassign in if:



                              String message = "We have an error";
                              if(somethingIsTrue()) {
                              message = "Everything is fine";
                              }
                              System.out.println(message);






                              share|improve this answer














                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer








                              edited Nov 1 '16 at 3:42









                              Ken Y-N

                              7,856134773




                              7,856134773










                              answered Dec 6 '15 at 9:19









                              JanJan

                              12.4k32244




                              12.4k32244








                              • 3





                                "Java has no free() or delete operators, so it has to rely on tracking variable scope to find out when variables are no longer used (together with references to these variables of cause)." - While true, this not relevant. C and C++ have free / delete operators respectively, and yet the equivalent C / C++ code to your examples would be illegal. C and C++ blocks limit the scope of variables just like in Java. In fact, this is true for most "block structured" languages.

                                – Stephen C
                                Nov 1 '17 at 13:41













                              • The better solution for code that assigns a different value on every branch is to use a blank final variable declaration.

                                – Daniel Pryden
                                Apr 3 '18 at 13:43














                              • 3





                                "Java has no free() or delete operators, so it has to rely on tracking variable scope to find out when variables are no longer used (together with references to these variables of cause)." - While true, this not relevant. C and C++ have free / delete operators respectively, and yet the equivalent C / C++ code to your examples would be illegal. C and C++ blocks limit the scope of variables just like in Java. In fact, this is true for most "block structured" languages.

                                – Stephen C
                                Nov 1 '17 at 13:41













                              • The better solution for code that assigns a different value on every branch is to use a blank final variable declaration.

                                – Daniel Pryden
                                Apr 3 '18 at 13:43








                              3




                              3





                              "Java has no free() or delete operators, so it has to rely on tracking variable scope to find out when variables are no longer used (together with references to these variables of cause)." - While true, this not relevant. C and C++ have free / delete operators respectively, and yet the equivalent C / C++ code to your examples would be illegal. C and C++ blocks limit the scope of variables just like in Java. In fact, this is true for most "block structured" languages.

                              – Stephen C
                              Nov 1 '17 at 13:41







                              "Java has no free() or delete operators, so it has to rely on tracking variable scope to find out when variables are no longer used (together with references to these variables of cause)." - While true, this not relevant. C and C++ have free / delete operators respectively, and yet the equivalent C / C++ code to your examples would be illegal. C and C++ blocks limit the scope of variables just like in Java. In fact, this is true for most "block structured" languages.

                              – Stephen C
                              Nov 1 '17 at 13:41















                              The better solution for code that assigns a different value on every branch is to use a blank final variable declaration.

                              – Daniel Pryden
                              Apr 3 '18 at 13:43





                              The better solution for code that assigns a different value on every branch is to use a blank final variable declaration.

                              – Daniel Pryden
                              Apr 3 '18 at 13:43











                              8














                              One way to get this error in Eclipse :




                              1. Define a class A in src/test/java.

                              2. Define another class B in src/main/java that uses class A.


                              Result : Eclipse will compile the code, but maven will give "Cannot find symbol".



                              Underlying cause : Eclipse is using a combined build path for the main and test trees. Unfortunately, it does not support using different build paths for different parts of an Eclipse project, which is what Maven requires.



                              Solution :




                              1. Don't define your dependencies that way; i.e. don't make this mistake.

                              2. Regularly build your codebase using Maven so that you pick up this mistake early. One way to do that is to use a CI server.






                              share|improve this answer


























                              • What is the solution to this one?

                                – user4964330
                                Jun 15 '16 at 10:27






                              • 2





                                whatever you use in src/main/java needs to be defined in src/main/java or in any compile/runtime dependencies (not test dependencies).

                                – Joel Costigliola
                                Jun 16 '16 at 4:27
















                              8














                              One way to get this error in Eclipse :




                              1. Define a class A in src/test/java.

                              2. Define another class B in src/main/java that uses class A.


                              Result : Eclipse will compile the code, but maven will give "Cannot find symbol".



                              Underlying cause : Eclipse is using a combined build path for the main and test trees. Unfortunately, it does not support using different build paths for different parts of an Eclipse project, which is what Maven requires.



                              Solution :




                              1. Don't define your dependencies that way; i.e. don't make this mistake.

                              2. Regularly build your codebase using Maven so that you pick up this mistake early. One way to do that is to use a CI server.






                              share|improve this answer


























                              • What is the solution to this one?

                                – user4964330
                                Jun 15 '16 at 10:27






                              • 2





                                whatever you use in src/main/java needs to be defined in src/main/java or in any compile/runtime dependencies (not test dependencies).

                                – Joel Costigliola
                                Jun 16 '16 at 4:27














                              8












                              8








                              8







                              One way to get this error in Eclipse :




                              1. Define a class A in src/test/java.

                              2. Define another class B in src/main/java that uses class A.


                              Result : Eclipse will compile the code, but maven will give "Cannot find symbol".



                              Underlying cause : Eclipse is using a combined build path for the main and test trees. Unfortunately, it does not support using different build paths for different parts of an Eclipse project, which is what Maven requires.



                              Solution :




                              1. Don't define your dependencies that way; i.e. don't make this mistake.

                              2. Regularly build your codebase using Maven so that you pick up this mistake early. One way to do that is to use a CI server.






                              share|improve this answer















                              One way to get this error in Eclipse :




                              1. Define a class A in src/test/java.

                              2. Define another class B in src/main/java that uses class A.


                              Result : Eclipse will compile the code, but maven will give "Cannot find symbol".



                              Underlying cause : Eclipse is using a combined build path for the main and test trees. Unfortunately, it does not support using different build paths for different parts of an Eclipse project, which is what Maven requires.



                              Solution :




                              1. Don't define your dependencies that way; i.e. don't make this mistake.

                              2. Regularly build your codebase using Maven so that you pick up this mistake early. One way to do that is to use a CI server.







                              share|improve this answer














                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer








                              edited Jul 30 '16 at 1:09









                              Stephen C

                              526k72586944




                              526k72586944










                              answered May 13 '16 at 10:09









                              Joel CostigliolaJoel Costigliola

                              2,2841017




                              2,2841017













                              • What is the solution to this one?

                                – user4964330
                                Jun 15 '16 at 10:27






                              • 2





                                whatever you use in src/main/java needs to be defined in src/main/java or in any compile/runtime dependencies (not test dependencies).

                                – Joel Costigliola
                                Jun 16 '16 at 4:27



















                              • What is the solution to this one?

                                – user4964330
                                Jun 15 '16 at 10:27






                              • 2





                                whatever you use in src/main/java needs to be defined in src/main/java or in any compile/runtime dependencies (not test dependencies).

                                – Joel Costigliola
                                Jun 16 '16 at 4:27

















                              What is the solution to this one?

                              – user4964330
                              Jun 15 '16 at 10:27





                              What is the solution to this one?

                              – user4964330
                              Jun 15 '16 at 10:27




                              2




                              2





                              whatever you use in src/main/java needs to be defined in src/main/java or in any compile/runtime dependencies (not test dependencies).

                              – Joel Costigliola
                              Jun 16 '16 at 4:27





                              whatever you use in src/main/java needs to be defined in src/main/java or in any compile/runtime dependencies (not test dependencies).

                              – Joel Costigliola
                              Jun 16 '16 at 4:27











                              3














                              "Can not find " means that , compiler who can't find appropriate variable, method ,class etc...if you got that error massage , first of all you want to find code line where get error massage..And then you will able to find which variable , method or class have not define before using it.After confirmation initialize that variable ,method or class can be used for later require...Consider the following example.



                              I'll create a demo class and print a name...



                              class demo{ 
                              public static void main(String a){
                              System.out.print(name);
                              }
                              }


                              Now look at the result..



                              enter image description here



                              That error says, "variable name can not find"..Defining and initializing value for 'name' variable can be abolished that error..Actually like this,



                              class demo{ 
                              public static void main(String a){

                              String name="smith";

                              System.out.print(name);
                              }
                              }


                              Now look at the new output...



                              enter image description here



                              Ok Successfully solved that error..At the same time , if you could get "can not find method " or "can not find class" something , At first,define a class or method and after use that..






                              share|improve this answer






























                                3














                                "Can not find " means that , compiler who can't find appropriate variable, method ,class etc...if you got that error massage , first of all you want to find code line where get error massage..And then you will able to find which variable , method or class have not define before using it.After confirmation initialize that variable ,method or class can be used for later require...Consider the following example.



                                I'll create a demo class and print a name...



                                class demo{ 
                                public static void main(String a){
                                System.out.print(name);
                                }
                                }


                                Now look at the result..



                                enter image description here



                                That error says, "variable name can not find"..Defining and initializing value for 'name' variable can be abolished that error..Actually like this,



                                class demo{ 
                                public static void main(String a){

                                String name="smith";

                                System.out.print(name);
                                }
                                }


                                Now look at the new output...



                                enter image description here



                                Ok Successfully solved that error..At the same time , if you could get "can not find method " or "can not find class" something , At first,define a class or method and after use that..






                                share|improve this answer




























                                  3












                                  3








                                  3







                                  "Can not find " means that , compiler who can't find appropriate variable, method ,class etc...if you got that error massage , first of all you want to find code line where get error massage..And then you will able to find which variable , method or class have not define before using it.After confirmation initialize that variable ,method or class can be used for later require...Consider the following example.



                                  I'll create a demo class and print a name...



                                  class demo{ 
                                  public static void main(String a){
                                  System.out.print(name);
                                  }
                                  }


                                  Now look at the result..



                                  enter image description here



                                  That error says, "variable name can not find"..Defining and initializing value for 'name' variable can be abolished that error..Actually like this,



                                  class demo{ 
                                  public static void main(String a){

                                  String name="smith";

                                  System.out.print(name);
                                  }
                                  }


                                  Now look at the new output...



                                  enter image description here



                                  Ok Successfully solved that error..At the same time , if you could get "can not find method " or "can not find class" something , At first,define a class or method and after use that..






                                  share|improve this answer















                                  "Can not find " means that , compiler who can't find appropriate variable, method ,class etc...if you got that error massage , first of all you want to find code line where get error massage..And then you will able to find which variable , method or class have not define before using it.After confirmation initialize that variable ,method or class can be used for later require...Consider the following example.



                                  I'll create a demo class and print a name...



                                  class demo{ 
                                  public static void main(String a){
                                  System.out.print(name);
                                  }
                                  }


                                  Now look at the result..



                                  enter image description here



                                  That error says, "variable name can not find"..Defining and initializing value for 'name' variable can be abolished that error..Actually like this,



                                  class demo{ 
                                  public static void main(String a){

                                  String name="smith";

                                  System.out.print(name);
                                  }
                                  }


                                  Now look at the new output...



                                  enter image description here



                                  Ok Successfully solved that error..At the same time , if you could get "can not find method " or "can not find class" something , At first,define a class or method and after use that..







                                  share|improve this answer














                                  share|improve this answer



                                  share|improve this answer








                                  edited Jul 1 '18 at 3:09

























                                  answered Jun 30 '18 at 11:09









                                  GT_hashGT_hash

                                  815




                                  815























                                      2














                                      If you're getting this error in the build somewhere else, while your IDE says everything is perfectly fine, then check that you are using the same Java versions in both places.



                                      For example, Java 7 and Java 8 have different APIs, so calling a non-existent API in an older Java version would cause this error.






                                      share|improve this answer




























                                        2














                                        If you're getting this error in the build somewhere else, while your IDE says everything is perfectly fine, then check that you are using the same Java versions in both places.



                                        For example, Java 7 and Java 8 have different APIs, so calling a non-existent API in an older Java version would cause this error.






                                        share|improve this answer


























                                          2












                                          2








                                          2







                                          If you're getting this error in the build somewhere else, while your IDE says everything is perfectly fine, then check that you are using the same Java versions in both places.



                                          For example, Java 7 and Java 8 have different APIs, so calling a non-existent API in an older Java version would cause this error.






                                          share|improve this answer













                                          If you're getting this error in the build somewhere else, while your IDE says everything is perfectly fine, then check that you are using the same Java versions in both places.



                                          For example, Java 7 and Java 8 have different APIs, so calling a non-existent API in an older Java version would cause this error.







                                          share|improve this answer












                                          share|improve this answer



                                          share|improve this answer










                                          answered Mar 8 '16 at 5:58









                                          Jonathan LinJonathan Lin

                                          11.5k45052




                                          11.5k45052























                                              0














                                              I too was getting this error. (for which I googled and I was directed to this page)



                                              Problem: I was calling a static method defined in the class of a project A from a class defined in another project B.
                                              I was getting the following error:



                                              error: cannot find symbol


                                              Solution: I resolved this by first building the project where the method is defined then the project where the method was being called from.






                                              share|improve this answer






























                                                0














                                                I too was getting this error. (for which I googled and I was directed to this page)



                                                Problem: I was calling a static method defined in the class of a project A from a class defined in another project B.
                                                I was getting the following error:



                                                error: cannot find symbol


                                                Solution: I resolved this by first building the project where the method is defined then the project where the method was being called from.






                                                share|improve this answer




























                                                  0












                                                  0








                                                  0







                                                  I too was getting this error. (for which I googled and I was directed to this page)



                                                  Problem: I was calling a static method defined in the class of a project A from a class defined in another project B.
                                                  I was getting the following error:



                                                  error: cannot find symbol


                                                  Solution: I resolved this by first building the project where the method is defined then the project where the method was being called from.






                                                  share|improve this answer















                                                  I too was getting this error. (for which I googled and I was directed to this page)



                                                  Problem: I was calling a static method defined in the class of a project A from a class defined in another project B.
                                                  I was getting the following error:



                                                  error: cannot find symbol


                                                  Solution: I resolved this by first building the project where the method is defined then the project where the method was being called from.







                                                  share|improve this answer














                                                  share|improve this answer



                                                  share|improve this answer








                                                  edited Oct 7 '16 at 14:09

























                                                  answered Sep 28 '16 at 14:59









                                                  MariaMaria

                                                  94317




                                                  94317























                                                      0














                                                      For hints, look closer at the class name name that throws an error and the line number, example:
                                                      Compilation failure
                                                      [ERROR] applicationsxxxxx.java:[44,30] error: cannot find symbol



                                                      One other cause is unsupported method of for java version say jdk7 vs 8.
                                                      Check your %JAVA_HOME%






                                                      share|improve this answer
























                                                      • This just says the same thing that other answers say.

                                                        – Stephen C
                                                        Jul 6 '18 at 11:03
















                                                      0














                                                      For hints, look closer at the class name name that throws an error and the line number, example:
                                                      Compilation failure
                                                      [ERROR] applicationsxxxxx.java:[44,30] error: cannot find symbol



                                                      One other cause is unsupported method of for java version say jdk7 vs 8.
                                                      Check your %JAVA_HOME%






                                                      share|improve this answer
























                                                      • This just says the same thing that other answers say.

                                                        – Stephen C
                                                        Jul 6 '18 at 11:03














                                                      0












                                                      0








                                                      0







                                                      For hints, look closer at the class name name that throws an error and the line number, example:
                                                      Compilation failure
                                                      [ERROR] applicationsxxxxx.java:[44,30] error: cannot find symbol



                                                      One other cause is unsupported method of for java version say jdk7 vs 8.
                                                      Check your %JAVA_HOME%






                                                      share|improve this answer













                                                      For hints, look closer at the class name name that throws an error and the line number, example:
                                                      Compilation failure
                                                      [ERROR] applicationsxxxxx.java:[44,30] error: cannot find symbol



                                                      One other cause is unsupported method of for java version say jdk7 vs 8.
                                                      Check your %JAVA_HOME%







                                                      share|improve this answer












                                                      share|improve this answer



                                                      share|improve this answer










                                                      answered Sep 6 '17 at 12:47









                                                      StrikerStriker

                                                      17325




                                                      17325













                                                      • This just says the same thing that other answers say.

                                                        – Stephen C
                                                        Jul 6 '18 at 11:03



















                                                      • This just says the same thing that other answers say.

                                                        – Stephen C
                                                        Jul 6 '18 at 11:03

















                                                      This just says the same thing that other answers say.

                                                      – Stephen C
                                                      Jul 6 '18 at 11:03





                                                      This just says the same thing that other answers say.

                                                      – Stephen C
                                                      Jul 6 '18 at 11:03











                                                      0














                                                      There can be various scenarios as people have mentioned above. A couple of things which have helped me resolve this.





                                                      1. If you are using IntelliJ



                                                        File -> 'Invalidate Caches/Restart'




                                                      OR





                                                      1. The class being referenced was in another project and that dependency was not added to the Gradle build file of my project. So I added the dependency using



                                                        compile project(':anotherProject')




                                                      and it worked. HTH!






                                                      share|improve this answer






























                                                        0














                                                        There can be various scenarios as people have mentioned above. A couple of things which have helped me resolve this.





                                                        1. If you are using IntelliJ



                                                          File -> 'Invalidate Caches/Restart'




                                                        OR





                                                        1. The class being referenced was in another project and that dependency was not added to the Gradle build file of my project. So I added the dependency using



                                                          compile project(':anotherProject')




                                                        and it worked. HTH!






                                                        share|improve this answer




























                                                          0












                                                          0








                                                          0







                                                          There can be various scenarios as people have mentioned above. A couple of things which have helped me resolve this.





                                                          1. If you are using IntelliJ



                                                            File -> 'Invalidate Caches/Restart'




                                                          OR





                                                          1. The class being referenced was in another project and that dependency was not added to the Gradle build file of my project. So I added the dependency using



                                                            compile project(':anotherProject')




                                                          and it worked. HTH!






                                                          share|improve this answer















                                                          There can be various scenarios as people have mentioned above. A couple of things which have helped me resolve this.





                                                          1. If you are using IntelliJ



                                                            File -> 'Invalidate Caches/Restart'




                                                          OR





                                                          1. The class being referenced was in another project and that dependency was not added to the Gradle build file of my project. So I added the dependency using



                                                            compile project(':anotherProject')




                                                          and it worked. HTH!







                                                          share|improve this answer














                                                          share|improve this answer



                                                          share|improve this answer








                                                          edited Aug 18 '18 at 1:50

























                                                          answered Aug 18 '18 at 1:45









                                                          avpavp

                                                          754918




                                                          754918























                                                              0














                                                              If eclipse Java build path is mapped to 7, 8 and in Project pom.xml Maven properties java.version is mentioned higher Java version(9,10,11, etc..,) than 7,8 you need to update in pom.xml file.



                                                              In Eclipse if Java is mapped to Java version 11 and in pom.xml it is mapped to Java version 8. Update Eclipse support to Java 11 by go through below steps in eclipse IDE
                                                              Help -> Install New Software ->



                                                              Paste following link http://download.eclipse.org/eclipse/updates/4.9-P-builds at Work With



                                                              or



                                                              Add (Popup window will open) ->



                                                              Name: Java 11 support
                                                              Location: http://download.eclipse.org/eclipse/updates/4.9-P-builds



                                                              then update Java version in Maven properties of pom.xml file as below



                                                              <java.version>11</java.version>
                                                              <maven.compiler.source>${java.version}</maven.compiler.source>
                                                              <maven.compiler.target>${java.version}</maven.compiler.target>


                                                              Finally do right click on project Debug as -> Maven clean, Maven build steps






                                                              share|improve this answer




























                                                                0














                                                                If eclipse Java build path is mapped to 7, 8 and in Project pom.xml Maven properties java.version is mentioned higher Java version(9,10,11, etc..,) than 7,8 you need to update in pom.xml file.



                                                                In Eclipse if Java is mapped to Java version 11 and in pom.xml it is mapped to Java version 8. Update Eclipse support to Java 11 by go through below steps in eclipse IDE
                                                                Help -> Install New Software ->



                                                                Paste following link http://download.eclipse.org/eclipse/updates/4.9-P-builds at Work With



                                                                or



                                                                Add (Popup window will open) ->



                                                                Name: Java 11 support
                                                                Location: http://download.eclipse.org/eclipse/updates/4.9-P-builds



                                                                then update Java version in Maven properties of pom.xml file as below



                                                                <java.version>11</java.version>
                                                                <maven.compiler.source>${java.version}</maven.compiler.source>
                                                                <maven.compiler.target>${java.version}</maven.compiler.target>


                                                                Finally do right click on project Debug as -> Maven clean, Maven build steps






                                                                share|improve this answer


























                                                                  0












                                                                  0








                                                                  0







                                                                  If eclipse Java build path is mapped to 7, 8 and in Project pom.xml Maven properties java.version is mentioned higher Java version(9,10,11, etc..,) than 7,8 you need to update in pom.xml file.



                                                                  In Eclipse if Java is mapped to Java version 11 and in pom.xml it is mapped to Java version 8. Update Eclipse support to Java 11 by go through below steps in eclipse IDE
                                                                  Help -> Install New Software ->



                                                                  Paste following link http://download.eclipse.org/eclipse/updates/4.9-P-builds at Work With



                                                                  or



                                                                  Add (Popup window will open) ->



                                                                  Name: Java 11 support
                                                                  Location: http://download.eclipse.org/eclipse/updates/4.9-P-builds



                                                                  then update Java version in Maven properties of pom.xml file as below



                                                                  <java.version>11</java.version>
                                                                  <maven.compiler.source>${java.version}</maven.compiler.source>
                                                                  <maven.compiler.target>${java.version}</maven.compiler.target>


                                                                  Finally do right click on project Debug as -> Maven clean, Maven build steps






                                                                  share|improve this answer













                                                                  If eclipse Java build path is mapped to 7, 8 and in Project pom.xml Maven properties java.version is mentioned higher Java version(9,10,11, etc..,) than 7,8 you need to update in pom.xml file.



                                                                  In Eclipse if Java is mapped to Java version 11 and in pom.xml it is mapped to Java version 8. Update Eclipse support to Java 11 by go through below steps in eclipse IDE
                                                                  Help -> Install New Software ->



                                                                  Paste following link http://download.eclipse.org/eclipse/updates/4.9-P-builds at Work With



                                                                  or



                                                                  Add (Popup window will open) ->



                                                                  Name: Java 11 support
                                                                  Location: http://download.eclipse.org/eclipse/updates/4.9-P-builds



                                                                  then update Java version in Maven properties of pom.xml file as below



                                                                  <java.version>11</java.version>
                                                                  <maven.compiler.source>${java.version}</maven.compiler.source>
                                                                  <maven.compiler.target>${java.version}</maven.compiler.target>


                                                                  Finally do right click on project Debug as -> Maven clean, Maven build steps







                                                                  share|improve this answer












                                                                  share|improve this answer



                                                                  share|improve this answer










                                                                  answered Jan 24 at 11:18









                                                                  pudaykiranpudaykiran

                                                                  4,87254674




                                                                  4,87254674

















                                                                      protected by Stephen C Jun 16 '15 at 21:27



                                                                      Thank you for your interest in this question.
                                                                      Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



                                                                      Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?



                                                                      Popular posts from this blog

                                                                      How to change which sound is reproduced for terminal bell?

                                                                      Can I use Tabulator js library in my java Spring + Thymeleaf project?

                                                                      Title Spacing in Bjornstrup Chapter, Removing Chapter Number From Contents