The APPLET Tag
Here is an example of a simple APPLET tag:
<applet code="MyApplet.class" width=100 height=140></applet>
This tells the viewer or browser to load the applet whose compiled
code is in MyApplet.class (in the same directory as the current
HTML document), and to set the initial size of the applet to 100
pixels wide and 140 pixels high.
Here's a more complex example of an APPLET tag:
<applet codebase="http://java.sun.com/applets/NervousText/1.1"
code="NervousText.class" width=400 height=75>
<param name="text" value="Welcome to HotJava!">
<hr>
If you were using a Java-enabled browser such as HotJava,
you would see dancing text instead of this paragraph.
<hr>
</applet>
This tells the viewer or browser to load the applet whose compiled
code is at the URL
http://java.sun.com/applets/NervousText/1.1/NervousText.class,
to set the initial size of the applet to 400x75 pixels. The
viewer/browser must also set the applet's "text" attribute (which
customizes the text this applet displays) to be "Welcome to
HotJava!" If the page is viewed by a browser that can't execute
Java applets, then the browser will ignore the APPLET and PARAM
tags, displaying only the HTML between the
<param>
and </applet>
tags
(the alternate HTML).
Here's the result of putting the above example in your HTML
file. (The first time you load this page, you may have to wait for
the applet to be loaded.)
Download and install the Java Runtime Environment (JRE) to view
the applet.
Here is another example of an APPLET tag:
<applet code=A21 width=256 height=256 archive="toir.jar">
<param name=img value=test.gif>
<hr>
We need to convert some of the standard applets to use
archive. Any volunteers?
<hr>
</applet>
In this example, the applet class is A21. Its bytecodes (may)
reside in the archive "toir.jar
". This archive may
also contain the image resource (see resources documentation) with
name test.gif
.
Here's the complete syntax for the APPLET tag. Required elements
are in bold. Optional elements are in regular
typeface. Elements your specify are in italics.
<APPLET
CODEBASE = codebaseURL
ARCHIVE = archiveList
CODE = appletFile ...or... OBJECT = serializedApplet
ALT = alternateText
NAME = appletInstanceName
WIDTH = pixels HEIGHT = pixels
ALIGN = alignment
VSPACE = pixels HSPACE = pixels
>
<PARAM NAME = appletAttribute1 VALUE = value>
<PARAM NAME = appletAttribute2 VALUE = value>
. . .
alternateHTML
</APPLET>
CODE, CODEBASE, and so on are attributes of the applet tag; they
give the browser information about the applet. The only mandatory
attributes are CODE, WIDTH, and HEIGHT. Each attribute is described
below.
- CODEBASE = codebaseURL
- This OPTIONAL attribute specifies the base URL of the
applet--the directory that contains the applet's code. If this
attribute is not specified, then the document's URL is used.
- ARCHIVE = archiveList
- This OPTIONAL attribute describes one or more archives
containing classes and other resources that will be "preloaded".
The classes are loaded using an instance of an AppletClassLoader
with the given CODEBASE.
The archives in archiveList are separated by ",". NB: in
JDK1.1, multiple APPLET tags with the same CODEBASE share the same
instance of a ClassLoader. This is used by some client code to
implement inter-applet communication. Future JDKs may
provide other mechanisms for inter-applet communication. For
security reasons, the applet's class loader can read only from the
same codebase from which the applet was started. This means that
archives in archiveList must be in the same directory as,
or in a subdirectory of, the codebase. Entries in
archiveList of the form ../a/b.jar will not work
unless explicitly allowed for in the security policy file (except
in the case of an http codebase, where archives in
archiveList must be from the same host as the codebase,
but can have ".."'s in their paths.)
- CODE = appletFile
- This REQUIRED attribute gives the name of the file that
contains the applet's compiled Applet subclass. This file is
relative to the base URL of the applet. It cannot be absolute. One
of CODE or OBJECT must be present. The value appletFile
can be of the form classname
.class
or of the
form
packagename.
classname.class
.
- OBJECT = serializedApplet
- This attribute gives the name of the file that contains a
serialized representation of an Applet. The Applet will be
deserialized. The init() method will *not* be invoked; but its
start() method will. Attributes valid when the original object was
serialized are *not* restored. Any attributes passed to this APPLET
instance will be available to the Applet; we advocate very strong
restraint in using this feature. An applet should be stopped before
it is serialized. One of CODE or OBJECT must be present.
- ALT = alternateText
- This OPTIONAL attribute specifies any text that should be
displayed if the browser understands the APPLET tag but can't run
Java applets.
- NAME = appletInstanceName
- This OPTIONAL attribute specifies a name for the applet
instance, which makes it possible for applets on the same page to
find (and communicate with) each other.
- WIDTH = pixels HEIGHT =
pixels
- These REQUIRED attributes give the initial width and height (in
pixels) of the applet display area, not counting any windows or
dialogs that the applet brings up.
- ALIGN = alignment
- This OPTIONAL attribute specifies the alignment of the applet.
The possible values of this attribute are the same as those for the
IMG tag: left, right, top, texttop, middle, absmiddle, baseline,
bottom, absbottom.
- VSPACE = pixels HSPACE = pixels
- These OPTIONAL attributes specify the number of pixels above
and below the applet (VSPACE) and on each side of the applet
(HSPACE). They're treated the same way as the IMG tag's VSPACE and
HSPACE attributes.
- <PARAM NAME = appletAttribute1 VALUE =
value>
<PARAM NAME = appletAttribute2 VALUE = value> . .
.
- This tag is the only way to specify an applet-specific
attribute. Applets access their attributes with the getParameter()
method.