Java applets - definição. O que é Java applets. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é Java applets - definição

DISCONTINUED WAY TO RUN SMALL JAVA PROGRAMS IN BROWSERS
Java plug-in; Java Applet; Java plugin; Java Applets; Java applets; Java Plug-in; Java - Writing an Applet; Java apps; Java.applet
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  • Demonstration of image processing using two dimensional [[Fourier transform]]
  • A Java applet that was created as supplementary demonstration material for a scientific publication
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  • url-status=dead }}</ref> that makes heavy use of [[OpenGL]] and on-demand data downloading to provide a detailed 3D map of the world.
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  • access]] to the server console at the hardware level with the help of a Java applet

Java applet         
Java applets were small applications written in the Java programming language, or another programming language that compiles to Java bytecode, and delivered to users in the form of Java bytecode. The user launched the Java applet from a web page, and the applet was then executed within a Java virtual machine (JVM) in a process separate from the web browser itself.
Java         
  • Alas Purwo]], eastern edge of Java
  • The 9th century [[Borobudur]] Buddhist [[stupa]] in Central Java
  • [[Parahyangan]] highland near [[Buitenzorg]], {{circa}} 1865–1872
  • Dutch colonial period]], in or before 1926
  • [[Cangkuang]] Hindu temple, a shrine for [[Shiva]], dated from the 8th century, the [[Galuh Kingdom]]
  • [[Betawi mask dance]] (''Tari Topeng Betawi'')
  • [[Jakarta]], the capital of [[Indonesia]]
  • Ujung Kulon]]; it is the world's rarest rhino.
  • Java transport network
  • 450px
  • Betawi]], the local dialect as one of Malay creole dialect.
  • rice fields]] near [[Salatiga]], in [[Central Java]]
  • "Welcome!" statue]] in [[Central Jakarta]]
  • [[Mount Bromo]] in [[East Java]]
  • Shinta]] in [[Ramayana]] ballet at [[Prambanan]], Java
  • [[SambaSunda]] music performance, featuring traditional [[Sundanese music]] instruments
  • [[Mount Sumbing]] surrounded by rice fields. Java's volcanic topography and rich agricultural lands are the fundamental factors in its history.
  • Japanese prepare to discuss surrender terms with British-allied forces in Java, 1945.
  • British Occupation of Java; men of the Bengal Sappers and Miners burn houses in the village of Bekasi as a reprisal for the murder of five members of the Royal Air Force and twenty Maharatta riflemen whose Dakota transport aircraft crash-landed near the village.
ISLAND OF INDONESIA, SOUTHEAST ASIA
Java, Indonesia; Java Island; Djawa; Jawa Dwipa; Java (island); ID-JW; Java island; Jawa (Indonesia); Jawa (island); Jawa, Indonesia; Java-Indonesia; Island of Java; ꦗꦮ; Java (Indonesia); She-po; Shepo; Yawadwipa; Yavadwipa; Yavadvipa; Geography of Java
Java is a computer programming language. It is used especially in creating websites. (TRADEMARK)
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Java         
  • Alas Purwo]], eastern edge of Java
  • The 9th century [[Borobudur]] Buddhist [[stupa]] in Central Java
  • [[Parahyangan]] highland near [[Buitenzorg]], {{circa}} 1865–1872
  • Dutch colonial period]], in or before 1926
  • [[Cangkuang]] Hindu temple, a shrine for [[Shiva]], dated from the 8th century, the [[Galuh Kingdom]]
  • [[Betawi mask dance]] (''Tari Topeng Betawi'')
  • [[Jakarta]], the capital of [[Indonesia]]
  • Ujung Kulon]]; it is the world's rarest rhino.
  • Java transport network
  • 450px
  • Betawi]], the local dialect as one of Malay creole dialect.
  • rice fields]] near [[Salatiga]], in [[Central Java]]
  • "Welcome!" statue]] in [[Central Jakarta]]
  • [[Mount Bromo]] in [[East Java]]
  • Shinta]] in [[Ramayana]] ballet at [[Prambanan]], Java
  • [[SambaSunda]] music performance, featuring traditional [[Sundanese music]] instruments
  • [[Mount Sumbing]] surrounded by rice fields. Java's volcanic topography and rich agricultural lands are the fundamental factors in its history.
  • Japanese prepare to discuss surrender terms with British-allied forces in Java, 1945.
  • British Occupation of Java; men of the Bengal Sappers and Miners burn houses in the village of Bekasi as a reprisal for the murder of five members of the Royal Air Force and twenty Maharatta riflemen whose Dakota transport aircraft crash-landed near the village.
ISLAND OF INDONESIA, SOUTHEAST ASIA
Java, Indonesia; Java Island; Djawa; Jawa Dwipa; Java (island); ID-JW; Java island; Jawa (Indonesia); Jawa (island); Jawa, Indonesia; Java-Indonesia; Island of Java; ꦗꦮ; Java (Indonesia); She-po; Shepo; Yawadwipa; Yavadwipa; Yavadvipa; Geography of Java
<programming, language, portability> (After the Indonesian island, a source of programming fluid) A simple, object-oriented, distributed, interpreted, robust, secure, architecture-neutral, portable, multithreaded, dynamic, buzzword-compliant, general-purpose programming language developed by Sun Microsystems in the early 1990's (initially for set-top television controllers), and released to the public in 1995. Java first became popular by being the earliest portable dynamic client-side content for the World-Wide Web in the form of platform-independent Java "applets". In the late 1990's and into the 2000's it has also become very popular on the server side, where an entire set of APIs defines the J2EE. Java is both a set of public specifications (controlled by Sun Microsystems through the JCP) and a series of implementations of those specifications. Java is syntactially similar to C++ without user-definable operator overloading, (though it does have method overloading), without multiple inheritance, and extensive automatic coercions. It has automatic garbage collection. Java extends C++'s object-oriented facilities with those of Objective C for dynamic method resolution. Whereas programs in C++ and similar languages are compiled and linked to platform-specific binary executables, Java programs are typically compiled to portable architecture-neutral bytecode or ".class" files, which are run using a {Java Virtual Machine}. The JVM is also called an interpreter, though it is more correct to say that it uses {Just-In-Time Compilation} to convert the bytecode into native {machine code}, yielding greater efficiency than most interpreted languages, rivalling C++ for many long-running, non-GUI applications. The run-time system is typically written in POSIX-compliant ANSI C or C++. Some implementations allow Java class files to be translated into native machine code during or after compilation. The Java compiler and linker both enforce {strong type checking} - procedures must be explicitly typed. Java supports the creation of virus-free, tamper-free systems with authentication based on public-key encryption. Java has an extensive library of routines for all kinds of programming tasks, rivalling that of other languages. For example, the "java.net} package supports TCP/IP protocols like HTTP and FTP. Java applications can access objects across the Internet via URLs almost as easily as on the local file system. There are also capabilities for several types of distributed applications. The Java GUI libraries provide portable interfaces. For example, there is an abstract Window class and implementations of it for Unix, Microsoft Windows and the Macintosh. The "java.awt" and "javax.swing" classes can be used either in Web-based "Applets" or in client-side or "desktop" applications. There are also packages for developing XML applications, web services, servlets and other web applications, security, date and time calculations and I/O formatting, database (JDBC), and many others. Java is not directly related to JavaScript despite the name. http://java.sun.com/. Usenet newsgroup: news:comp.lang.java. (2005-01-21)

Wikipédia

Java applet

Java applets were small applications written in the Java programming language, or another programming language that compiles to Java bytecode, and delivered to users in the form of Java bytecode. The user launched the Java applet from a web page, and the applet was then executed within a Java virtual machine (JVM) in a process separate from the web browser itself. A Java applet could appear in a frame of the web page, a new application window, Sun's AppletViewer, or a stand-alone tool for testing applets.

Java applets were introduced in the first version of the Java language, which was released in 1995. Beginning in 2013, major web browsers began to phase out support for the underlying technology applets used to run, with applets becoming completely unable to be run by 2015–2017. Java applets were deprecated by Java 9 in 2017.

Java applets were usually written in Java, but other languages such as Jython, JRuby, Pascal, Scala, NetRexx, or Eiffel (via SmartEiffel) could be used as well.

Java applets run at very fast speeds and until 2011, they were many times faster than JavaScript. Unlike JavaScript, Java applets had access to 3D hardware acceleration, making them well-suited for non-trivial, computation-intensive visualizations. As browsers have gained support for hardware-accelerated graphics thanks to the canvas technology (or specifically WebGL in the case of 3D graphics), as well as just-in-time compiled JavaScript, the speed difference has become less noticeable.

Since Java bytecode is cross-platform (or platform independent), Java applets could be executed by clients for many platforms, including Microsoft Windows, FreeBSD, Unix, macOS and Linux. They could not be run on mobile devices, which do not support running standard Oracle JVM bytecode. Android devices can run code written in Java compiled for the Android Runtime.