The Java Tutorials have been written for JDK 8. Examples and practices described in this page don't take advantage of improvements introduced in later releases and might use technology no longer available.
See Java Language Changes for a summary of updated language features in Java SE 9 and subsequent releases.
See JDK Release Notes for information about new features, enhancements, and removed or deprecated options for all JDK releases.
A Java applet can communicate with other Java applets by using JavaScript functions in the parent web page. JavaScript functions enable communication between applets by receiving messages from one applet and invoking methods of other applets. See the following topics for more information about the interaction between Java code and JavaScript code:
You should avoid using the following mechanisms to find other applets and share data between applets:
getApplet
and getApplets
methods of the
AppletContext
class to find other applets. These methods only find applets that are running in the same instance of the Java Runtime Environment software.Applets must originate from the same directory on the server in order to communicate with each other.
The Sender and Receiver applets are shown next. When a user clicks the button to increment the counter, the Sender applet invokes a JavaScript function to send a request to the Receiver applet. Upon receiving the request, the Receiver applet increments a counter variable and displays the value of the variable.
Sender Applet
Receiver Applet
To enable communication with another applet, obtain a reference to an instance of the netscape.javascript.JSObject
class. Use this instance to invoke JavaScript functions. The
Sender
applet uses an instance of the netscape.javascript.JSObject
class to invoke a JavaScript function called sendMsgToIncrementCounter
.
try { JSObject window = JSObject.getWindow(this); window.eval("sendMsgToIncrementCounter()"); } catch (JSException jse) { // ... }
netscape.javascript
package, include <your JDK path>/jre/lib/plugin.jar
in your classpath. At runtime, the Java Plug-in software automatically makes these classes available to applets.
Write the JavaScript function that will receive requests from one applet and invoke methods of another applet on the web page. The sendMsgToIncrementCounter
JavaScript function invokes the Receiver applet's incrementCounter
method.
<script> function sendMsgToIncrementCounter() { var myReceiver = document.getElementById("receiver"); myReceiver.incrementCounter(); } <script>
Note that the JavaScript code uses the name receiver
to obtain a reference to the Receiver applet on the web page. This name should be the same as the value of the id
attribute that is specified when you deploy the Receiver applet.
The
Receiver
applet's incrementCounter
method is shown next.
public void incrementCounter() { ctr++; String text = " Current Value Of Counter: " + (new Integer(ctr)).toString(); ctrLbl.setText(text); }
Deploy the applets on the web page as shown in the following code snippet. You can view the Sender and Receiver applets and associated JavaScript code in
.AppletPage.html
<!-- Sender Applet --> <script src="https://www.java.com/js/deployJava.js"></script> <script> var attributes = { code:'Sender.class', archive:'examples/dist/applet_SenderReceiver/applet_SenderReceiver.jar', width:300, height:50} ; var parameters = { permissions:'sandbox' }; deployJava.runApplet(attributes, parameters, '1.6'); </script> <!-- Receiver Applet --> <script> var attributes = { id:'receiver', code:'Receiver.class', archive:'examples/dist/applet_SenderReceiver/applet_SenderReceiver.jar', width:300, height:50} ; var parameters = { permissions:'sandbox' }; deployJava.runApplet(attributes, parameters, '1.6'); </script>
Download source code for the Sender Receiver Applets example to experiment further.