Does anyone know how I can yoink a Java applet from a web page? I can see the "applet code=" tag in the source but I'm not sure how to get at it.
(I don't want to do anything naughty with it, especially distribute it as my own; I just find it incredibly useful and would like to be able to use it without dialing up my net connection, and to be sure I'll still have it should the website cease to exist.)
(I don't want to do anything naughty with it, especially distribute it as my own; I just find it incredibly useful and would like to be able to use it without dialing up my net connection, and to be sure I'll still have it should the website cease to exist.)
no subject
Date: Sep. 9th, 2003 04:20 pm (UTC)From:Java applets can either be precompiled or executed in a runtime state. The practical difference is that a precompiled applet usually has the .jar extention and is a self-contained thing, whereas the runtime mode is more analogous to a pile of source code that is being compiled on the fly as the user interacts with it. Runtime languages tend not to be preferred because they're slower, but they're also easier to learn.
Sounds like the author of this applet took the latter approach. Your soultion sounds like a good one. Of course there are all kinds of die rollar apps for Windows out there, aren't there? (I mean I can think of four freeware rollers for Mac alone, I can't imagine there's less for windows...)
Ah well. geeking out can often be its own reward anyway :)