No idea why exactly, I just realised I was on the wrong jdk after like 30 minutes of wondering how the fuck I misconfigured a desktop application so it won't work.
And similar problem with mondrian server where it couldn't find some class through reflection lol. Guess that happens when you rely on implementation.
@Squirrelkiller You can bundle the JRE you need with your application. Works very well, since it gives you guarantee that the application works, regardless of which (if any) Java is installed on the computer. Why more Java developers don't do that, I cannot tell you.
Although, TBH, I've not really followed through what happened with the licensing post Java 8-9. Bundling the JRE for redistribution used to be OK, not sure if Oracle have changed that when they changed the licensing stuff.
At any rate, if you want to have different Java executions to run with different Java version, I'd suggest to just make a small script that changes the environment variables for the current execution and then launches the Java application. Can't remember exactly how you do that with Batch script or PS script but you can do something like "launch this with current environment variables". After you've set them, of course.
The program should then be using the env vars from execution time, not the ones set globally
You could also just have a shortcut that's like "C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.8.0\bin\java.exe" -jar program1.jar and "C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.9.0\bin\java.exe" -jar program2.jar however, if those happen to use environment variables, it might be a problem.