Hi,
Did you see that on Eclipse's projects?
You can set there your compiler version too.


On 10/8/09, Jess Holle <[email protected]> wrote:
> TorNorbye wrote:
>> On Oct 6, 5:48 pm, Jess Holle <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>>  Except in NetBeans where is is
>>> really hard to separate the JDK the IDE runs with from the JDK used for
>>> compilation, but that's a NetBeans issue that should just be fixed there
>>> -- or better yet fixed via a -libraryLevel or some such flag.
>>>
>> What's the difficulty here? You can configure additional JDK
>> installations via Tools > Java Platforms, and then for your Java
>> projects, go to the Library panel and choose that platform under the
>> "Platform:" combo box. That target JDK, not the one the JDK you're
>> running the IDE (by default they are the same), should be used for
>> compilation, execution, and background parsing.   I'm probably missing
>> something - e.g. maybe this doesn't work for certain project types or
>> maybe Maven, but I'm just asking since I've never run into that issue
>> before.
>>
> This works great for "standard" projects, but is a mess for free-form
> ones...
>
>
> >
>

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