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I'm working with an existing Java codebase which, while it can be invoked from an HTML page using an <APPLET> tag, does not actually subclass the Applet class. The same jars are also used in a non-browser context, so they did not subclass Applet.

Now I need to communicate some values from Java back to the Javascript of the invoking page. Normally one would do this using JSObject, but so far as I can one has to use JSObject.getWindow which only works for subclasses of Applet.

Is there either:

  • a way to use JSObject from something which isn't an Applet subclass?
  • some other mechanism to communicate back to the Javascript of the invoking page?
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3 Answers

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I think you're actually going to need to implement an applet in a jar file to handle the communication between your code and the browser itself. Perhaps just use the non-applet jar as a class lib and make the applet jar a simple wrapper that proxies your calls between the browser and the Java code.

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Call JSObject.getWindow(this) in the applet. Then pass the JSObject into the code that needs it in the usual fashion.

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What's wrong with returning a value?

From Javascript You can access the Java-object by using getElementById("id-of-embed-tag"). Then you can invoke any public method on that object. The Java object returned by that method will be available to your Javascript code.

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Thats an approach I had not considered. I'd end up polling from the Javascript until something changes, but that might work. – DGentry Nov 15 '08 at 4:31

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