Table of Contents | Previous
| Next
| Index
Includes a Java applet in a web page.
The HTML APPLET tag. The JavaScript runtime engine creates an Applet object corresponding to each applet in your document. It puts these objects in an array in the document.applets property. You access an Applet object by indexing this array.
To define an applet, use standard HTML syntax. If you specify the NAME attribute, you can use the value of that attribute to index into the applets array. To refer to an applet in JavaScript, you must supply the MAYSCRIPT attribute in its definition.
The author of an HTML page must permit an applet to access JavaScript by specifying the MAYSCRIPT attribute of the APPLET tag. This prevents an applet from accessing JavaScript on a page without the knowledge of the page author. For example, to allow the musicPicker.class applet access to JavaScript on your page, specify the following:
<APPLET CODE="musicPicker.class" WIDTH=200 HEIGHT=35 NAME="musicApp" MAYSCRIPT>
Accessing JavaScript when the MAYSCRIPT attribute is not specified results in an exception.
For more information on using applets, see the LiveConnect information in the Client-Side JavaScript Guide.
The Applet object inherits all public properties of the Java applet.
The Applet object inherits all public methods of the Java applet.
The following code launches an applet called musicApp:
<APPLET CODE="musicSelect.class" WIDTH=200 HEIGHT=35 NAME="musicApp" MAYSCRIPT> </APPLET>
For more examples, see the LiveConnect information in the Client-Side JavaScript Guide.
MimeType, Plugin
Table of Contents | Previous
| Next
| Index
Last Updated: 05/28/99 11:58:59
Copyright (c) 1999
Netscape Communications Corporation
|