I recently downloaded IntelliJ IDEA to a different computer. On one computer it works fine on the other computer it is giving me this current issue.
When i open a new project with a template it automatically shows errors everywhere even though it allows the code to run and shows the output correctly: standard Java library classes like String and System are highlighted in red and the error tooltip says: «cannot resolve symbol».
I have tried «Invalidate caches/Restart», but it didn’t help.

CrazyCoder
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asked Apr 13, 2020 at 1:22
Check the JDK configuration Classpath tab in Project Structure | SDKs:

Also check that project and modules use the same JDK.
If it’s empty, remove the JDK and add it again. It’s not recommended to use JetBrains Runtime as your JDK, download and configure some different standalone JDK instead, 2020.1 version can download JDK for you.
Important notice
The bundled JRE is used for running the IDE itself,
and it’s not sufficient for developing Java applications. Before you
start developing in Java, download and install a standalone JDK build.
answered Apr 13, 2020 at 1:32
CrazyCoderCrazyCoder
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0
I tried above, but no luck. I did get it working with File -> Invalidate Caches…
I selected all three checkboxes and then «Invalidate and Restart». That worked for me.
answered Apr 14, 2021 at 11:02
BBNKSRBBNKSR
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1
Often this means there is an issue with your java compiler. Normally this issue arises on an initial Intellij install. You can install/update the java compiler to get it working properly.
Go to the editor and type Ctrl + Alt + Shift + A . Then, a little bar pops down and you can select to either install the compiler, or configure it. Both times this happened to me, I just clicked install and once it was done, everything worked. If the install doesn’t work, you can just reconfigure your compiler.
answered May 21, 2021 at 14:20
JeremyJeremy
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Removing the Java SDK and adding it back under File->Project Structure did it for me.
answered Nov 11, 2021 at 4:48
The only thing that worked for me (after hours of trying!) was to use the Android Studio’s embedded JDK. «Invalidate caches/Restart» did not solve the issue, even using the same JDK version which was not coming with Android Studio was giving the Cannot resolve symbol 'String' errors. Wonder what’s so special with this pre-packaged JDK! Hmmm
answered Feb 26, 2022 at 18:56
doctorramdoctorram
1,06214 silver badges13 bronze badges
For me the solution seems to have been creating a new Run Configuration.
I had tried deleting the SDKs, and re-adding the one I needed but that did not clear the error. But creating a new Run Configuration did the trick.
answered Jun 27, 2022 at 19:25
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cptullycptully
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I had this problem when I uninstalled JDK and re installed it, and when I was making a new project I had the uninstalled JDK file selected, which somehow caused the system to be in red and un run-able.
answered Nov 26, 2022 at 0:21
2
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How to fix IntelliJ cannot resolve symbol
Thursday 08, October 2015 | Post link
Ever since copying a Gradle project from one computer to another I have been getting ‘cannot resolve symbol String’ and similar messages in IntelliJ. Listed below are steps which *may* fix the problem:
-
Invalidate and refresh the IntelliJ’s caches
File Menu -> Invalidate Caches / Restart -
Project SDK selection
Check project settings from File Menu -> Project Structure
Ensure an SDK is selected for the Project SDK. If is selected, click the ‘New’ button, select JDK and then select the correct path to the JDK e.g. /opt/java/jdk1.8 or c:JavaJdk1.8
- Corrupt JDK
There may be a problem with your JDK installation, re-install JDK -
Re-import the project
Close the project if it is open in IntelliJ
Delete the .idea folder in the project source code folder.
Start IntelliJ and Import the project.
IDEA начала подписывать все переменные типа string. При компиляции выдаёт приблизительно следующее Cannot resolve a symbol ‘string’. JDK подключен, на всякий случай переустановлен. Работает.
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Вопрос заданболее трёх лет назад
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Query:
Please explain the following about “Cannot find symbol”, “Cannot resolve symbol” or “Symbol not found” errors (in Java).
“Cannot find symbol”, “Cannot resolve symbol” and “Symbol not found” all mean the same thing. Different Java compilers use different phraseology.
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
class,while, and so on. - Literals: like
true,false,42,'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.
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.
StringBiulderinstead ofStringBuilder. Java cannot and will not attempt to compensate for bad spelling or typing errors. - Perhaps you got the case wrong; i.e.
stringBuilderinstead ofStringBuilder. All Java identifiers are case sensitive. - Perhaps you used underscores inappropriately; i.e.
mystringandmy_stringare 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?)
- Perhaps you spelled the name incorrectly; i.e.
- 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.
"rope".push()2. - Perhaps you are trying to use a method as a field, or vice versa; e.g.
"rope".lengthorsomeArray.length(). - Perhaps you are mistakenly operating on an array rather than array element; e.g.
String strings[] = ... if (strings.charAt(3)) { ... } // maybe that should be 'strings[0].charAt(3)'
- 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
newas in:String s = String(); // should be 'new String()'
- For cases where type or instance doesn’t appear to have the member (e.g. method or field) 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 may have suggested
java.awt.Listrather thanjava.util.List. - Perhaps you are using (compiling against) the wrong version of an API.
- Perhaps you forgot to cast your object to an appropriate subclass.
- Perhaps you have declared your variable’s type to be a supertype of the one with the member you are looking for.
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:
List<String> strings = ...
for (int i = 0; i < strings.size(); i++) {
if (strings.get(i).equalsIgnoreCase("fnord")) {
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.
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
fortofor (int j = 1; j < 10; j++)– probably correct. - I could add a declaration for
jbefore the innerforloop, or the outerforloop – possibly correct. - I could change
jtoiin the innerforloop – 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.
Obscure causes
Here are a couple of cases where the “Cannot find symbol” is seemingly inexplicable … until you look closer.
- 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.
- Cannot find symbol ‘var’: You are probably trying to compile source code that uses local variable type inference (i.e. a
vardeclaration) with an older compiler or older--sourcelevel. Thevarwas introduced in Java 10. Check your JDK version and your build files, and (if this occurs in an IDE), the IDE settings. - 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 …
- 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 -tvfto list the contents of the suspect JAR file. - 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 could happen if the IDE has been configured with the wrong JDK version.
- This could 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 described a scenario where Eclipse did not handle a Maven “test” tree correctly: see this answer. (Apparently that particular bug was been fixed a long time ago.)
- Android issues: When you are programming for Android, and you have “Cannot find symbol” errors related to
R, be aware that theRsymbols are defined by thecontext.xmlfile. Check that yourcontext.xmlfile is correct and in the correct place, and that the correspondingRclass file has been generated / compiled. Note that the Java symbols are case sensitive, so the corresponding XML ids are be case sensitive too.Other symbol errors on Android are likely to be due to previously mention reasons; e.g. missing or incorrect dependencies, incorrect package names, method or fields that don’t exist in a particular API version, spelling / typing errors, and so on. - Hiding system classes: I’ve seen cases where the compiler complains that
substringis an unknown symbol in something like the followingString s = ... String s1 = s.substring(1);It turned out that the programmer had created their own version ofStringand that his version of the class didn’t define asubstringmethods. I’ve seen people do this withSystem,Scannerand other classes.Lesson: Don’t define your own classes with the same names as common library classes!The problem can also be solved by using the fully qualified names. For example, in the example above, the programmer could have written:java.lang.String s = ... java.lang.String s1 = s.substring(1); - 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
uxxxxescapes for other characters.
What does a “Cannot find symbol” error mean? Answer #2:
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);
What does a “Cannot find symbol” error mean? Answer #3:
You’ll also get this error if you forget a new:
String s = String();
versus
String s = new String();
because the call without the new keyword will try and look for a (local) method called String without arguments – and that method signature is likely not defined.
And one of the simplest solution that might work for you in 99% of the cases is:
Using IntelliJ
Select Build->Rebuild Project will solve it.
Hope this post helped you in understanding what does a “Cannot find symbol” error means.
Follow Programming Articles for more!
Introduction to Symbol Tables
Symbol tables are an important data structure created and maintained by compilers to store information associated with identifiers [1] in a given source code. This information is entered into the symbol tables during lexical and syntax analysis and is used in the later phases of compilation. As the declarations of classes, interfaces, variables, and methods are processed, their identifiers are bound to corresponding entries in the symbol tables. When uses of these identifiers are encountered in the source code, the compiler looks them up in the symbol tables and relies on this information for things such as verifying that a variable has been declared, determining the scope of a variable, and verifying that an expression is semantically correct with type checking. Symbol tables are also used for code generation and optimization [2].
A simplified representation of a symbol table entry (or simply, a symbol) in Java has the following format: <symbol name (identifier), type, scope, [attributes]>. Given a global variable declaration like final double ratio; the corresponding symbol would then be <ratio, double, global, [final]>.
Install the Java SDK to identify and fix exceptions
Cannot Find Symbol Error
As its name implies, the cannot find symbol error refers to a symbol which cannot be found. While there are multiple ways and reasons this can occur, they all boil down to the fact that the Java compiler is unable to find the symbol associated with a given identifier.
The message produced by the compiler for the cannot find symbol error includes two additional fields:
- “symbol”—the name and type of the referenced identifier; and
- “location”—the specific class in which the identifier has been referenced.
What Causes the Cannot Find Symbol Error
The most common triggers for the cannot find symbol compile-time error include:
- missing variable and method declarations;
- out-of-scope references to variables and methods;
- misspelled identifiers; and
- omitted import statements.
Cannot Find Symbol vs Symbol Not Found vs Cannot Resolve Symbol
As different Java compilers use slightly different terminology, the cannot find symbol error can also be found under the terms symbol not found and cannot resolve symbol. Besides the naming, there is no difference between what these terms stand for.
Cannot Find Symbol Error Examples
Undeclared variable
When the Java compiler encounters a use of an identifier which it cannot find in the symbol table, it raises the cannot find symbol error. Consequently, the most common occurrence of this error is when there is a reference to an undeclared variable. Unlike some other languages that don’t require explicit declaration of variables [3], or may allow declaring a variable after it has been referenced (via hoisting [4]), Java requires declaring a variable before it can be used or referenced in any way.
Fig. 1(a) shows how an undeclared variable, in this case the identifier average on line 9, results in two instances of the cannot find symbol error, at the positions where they appear in the code. Declaring this variable by specifying its data type (or, alternatively, inferring its type with the var keyword in Java 10+) resolves the issue (Fig. 1(b)).
(a)
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package rollbar;
public class UndeclaredVariable {
public static void main(String... args) {
int x = 6;
int y = 10;
int z = 32;
average = (x + y + z) / 3.0; // average is not declared
System.out.println(average);
}
}
UndeclaredVariable.java:9: error: cannot find symbol
average = (x + y + z) / 3.0;
^
symbol: variable average
location: class UndeclaredVariable
UndeclaredVariable.java:10: error: cannot find symbol
System.out.println(average);
^
symbol: variable average
location: class UndeclaredVariable
2 errors
(b)
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package rollbar;
public class UndeclaredVariable {
public static void main(String... args) {
int x = 6;
int y = 10;
int z = 32;
double average = (x + y + z) / 3.0;
System.out.println(average);
}
}
16.0
Out of scope variable
When a Java program tries to access a variable declared in a different (non-inherited or non-overlapping) scope, the compiler triggers the cannot find symbol error. This is demonstrated by the attempt to access the variable counter on lines 17 and 18 in Fig. 2(a), which is accessible only within the for statement declared on line 11. Moving the counter variable outside the for loop fixes the issue, as shown on Fig. 2(b).
(a)
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package rollbar;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.List;
public class OutOfScopeVariable {
public static void main(String... args) {
final List<String> strings = Arrays.asList("Hello", "World");
final String searchFor = "World";
for (int counter = 0; counter < strings.size(); counter++) {
if (strings.get(counter).equals(searchFor)) {
break;
}
}
if (counter < strings.size()) {
System.out.println("The word " + searchFor + " was found at index " + counter);
} else {
System.out.println("The word " + searchFor + " wasn't found");
}
}
}
OutOfScopeVariable.java:17: error: cannot find symbol
if (counter < strings.size()) {
^
symbol: variable counter
location: class OutOfScopeVariable
OutOfScopeVariable.java:18: error: cannot find symbol
System.out.println("The word " + searchFor + " was found at index " + counter);
^
symbol: variable counter
location: class OutOfScopeVariable
2 errors
(b)
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package rollbar;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.List;
public class OutOfScopeVariable {
public static void main(String... args) {
final List<String> strings = Arrays.asList("Hello", "World");
final String searchFor = "World";
int counter;
for (counter = 0; counter < strings.size(); counter++) {
if (strings.get(counter).equals(searchFor)) {
break;
}
}
if (counter < strings.size()) {
System.out.println("The word " + searchFor + " was found at index " + counter);
} else {
System.out.println("The word " + searchFor + " wasn't found");
}
}
}
The word ‘World’ was found at index 1Misspelled method name
Misspelling an existing method, or any valid identifier, causes a cannot find symbol error. Java identifiers are case-sensitive, so any variation of an existing variable, method, class, interface, or package name will result in this error, as demonstrated in Fig. 3.
(a)
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package rollbar;
public class MisspelledMethodName {
static int fibonacci(int n) {
if (n == 0) return 0;
if (n == 1) return 1;
return fibonacci(n - 1) + fibonacci(n - 2);
}
public static void main(String... args) {
int fib20 = Fibonacci(20); // Fibonacci ≠ fibonacci
System.out.println(fib20);
}
}
MisspelledMethodName.java:11: error: cannot find symbol
int fib20 = Fibonacci(20);
^
symbol: method Fibonacci(int)
location: class MisspelledMethodName
(b)
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package rollbar;
public class MisspelledMethodName {
static int fibonacci(int n) {
if (n == 0) return 0;
if (n == 1) return 1;
return fibonacci(n - 1) + fibonacci(n - 2);
}
public static void main(String... args) {
int fib20 = fibonacci(20);
System.out.println(fib20);
}
}
6765Missing import statement
Using classes, either from the Java platform or any library, requires importing them correctly with the import statement. Failing to do so will result in the cannot find symbol error being raised by the Java compiler. The code snippet in Fig. 4(a) makes use of the java.util.List class without declaring the corresponding import, therefore the cannot find symbol error occurs. Adding the missing import statement (line 4 in Fig. 4(b)) solves the problem.
(a)
package rollbar;
import java.util.Arrays;
public class MissingImportList {
private static final List<String> CONSTANTS = Arrays.asList("A", "B", "C");
public static void main(String... args) {
System.out.println(CONSTANTS);
}
}
MissingImportList.java:6: error: cannot find symbol
private static final List<String> CONSTANTS = Arrays.asList("A", "B", "C");
^
symbol: class List
location: class MissingImportList
(b)
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package rollbar;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.List;
public class MissingImportList {
private static final List<String> CONSTANTS = Arrays.asList("A", "B", "C");
public static void main(String... args) {
System.out.println(CONSTANTS);
}
}
[A, B, C]Less common examples
The root cause for the cannot find symbol Java error can occasionally be found in some unexpected or obscure places. Such is the case with accidental semicolons that terminate a statement ahead of time (Fig. 5), or when object creation is attempted without a proper constructor invocation which has to have the new keyword (Fig. 6).
(a)
package rollbar;
public class LoopScope {
public static void main(String... args) {
int start = 1, end = 10;
for (int i = start; i <= end; i++); {
System.out.print(i == end ? i : i + ", ");
}
}
}
LoopScope.java:7: error: cannot find symbol
System.out.print(i == end ? i : i + ", ");
^
symbol: variable i
location: class LoopScope
LoopScope.java:7: error: cannot find symbol
System.out.print(i == end ? i : i + ", ");
^
symbol: variable i
location: class LoopScope
LoopScope.java:7: error: cannot find symbol
System.out.print(i == end ? i : i + ", ");
^
symbol: variable i
location: class LoopScope
3 errors
(b)
package rollbar;
public class LoopScope {
public static void main(String... args) {
int start = 1, end = 10;
for (int i = start; i <= end; i++) {
System.out.print(i == end ? i : i + ", ");
}
}
}
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10(a)
package rollbar;
public class ObjectCreation {
public static void main(String... args) {
String s = String("Hello World!");
System.out.println(s);
}
}
ObjectCreation.java:5: error: cannot find symbol
String s = String("Hello World!");
^
symbol: method String(String)
location: class ObjectCreation
(b)
package rollbar;
public class ObjectCreation {
public static void main(String... args) {
String s = new String("Hello World!");
System.out.println(s);
}
}
Hello World!Other causes for the cannot find symbol error may include:
- using dependencies with old or incompatible versions;
- forgetting to recompile a program;
- building a project with an older JDK version;
- redefining platform or library classes with the same name;
- the use of homoglyphs in identifier construction that are difficult to tell apart;
- etc.
Conclusion
The cannot find symbol error, also found under the names of symbol not found and cannot resolve symbol, is a Java compile-time error which emerges whenever there is an identifier in the source code which the compiler is unable to work out what it refers to. As with any other compilation error, it is crucial to understand what causes this error, pinpoint the issue and address it properly. In the majority of cases, referencing undeclared variables and methods, including by way of misspelling them or failing to import their corresponding package, is what triggers this error. Once discovered, resolution is pretty straightforward, as demonstrated in this article.
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References
[1] Rollbar, 2021. Handling the <Identifier> Expected Error in Java. Rollbar Editorial Team. [Online]. Available: https://rollbar.com/blog/how-to-handle-the-identifier-expected-error-in-java/. [Accessed Nov. 22, 2021].
[2] ITL Education Solutions Limited, Principles of Compiler Design (Express Learning), 1st ed. New Delhi: Pearson Education (India), 2012.
[3] Tutorialspoint.com, 2021. Python — Variable Types. [Online]. Available: https://www.tutorialspoint.com/python/python_variable_types.htm. [Accessed: Nov. 23, 2021].
[4] JavaScript Tutorial, 2021. JavaScript Hoisting Explained By Examples. [Online]. Available: https://www.javascripttutorial.net/javascript-hoisting/. [Accessed: Nov. 23, 2021]
