red30 Well-Known Member Licensed User Longtime User Jan 12, 2022 #1 Is it possible using B4JPackager11 or Integrated B4JPackager11 to create an application that will run on a 32-bit version of Windows?
Is it possible using B4JPackager11 or Integrated B4JPackager11 to create an application that will run on a 32-bit version of Windows?
jahswant Well-Known Member Licensed User Longtime User Jan 12, 2022 #2 red30 said: Is it possible using B4JPackager11 or Integrated B4JPackager11 to create an application that will run on a 32-bit version of Windows? Click to expand... NO. But you can switch to Java 8 packaging tool wuth JDK 32bits. Upvote 0
red30 said: Is it possible using B4JPackager11 or Integrated B4JPackager11 to create an application that will run on a 32-bit version of Windows? Click to expand... NO. But you can switch to Java 8 packaging tool wuth JDK 32bits.
Erel B4X founder Staff member Licensed User Longtime User Jan 13, 2022 #3 You can also distribute the compiled jar directly, for the few 32 bit users. Edit: you need to compile with Java 8. Last edited: Jan 13, 2022 Upvote 0
You can also distribute the compiled jar directly, for the few 32 bit users. Edit: you need to compile with Java 8.
red30 Well-Known Member Licensed User Longtime User Jan 13, 2022 #4 Erel said: You can also distribute the compiled jar directly, for the few 32 bit users. Click to expand... But "exe" file is not how not possible to make from this "jar" file? Upvote 0
Erel said: You can also distribute the compiled jar directly, for the few 32 bit users. Click to expand... But "exe" file is not how not possible to make from this "jar" file?
Erel B4X founder Staff member Licensed User Longtime User Jan 13, 2022 #5 1. You can double click on the jar to start it. 2. You can convert it to an executable file with the deprecated launch4j tool. Unlike the standalone package, it will depend on Java 8 being installed on the user computer. Upvote 0
1. You can double click on the jar to start it. 2. You can convert it to an executable file with the deprecated launch4j tool. Unlike the standalone package, it will depend on Java 8 being installed on the user computer.