Name
applet — <applet> . . . </applet>
Deprecated. This
element (first introduced in Netscape Navigator 2.0) is used to
place a Java applet on the web page. The applet
element has been deprecated in
favor of the object
element,
but it is still supported and commonly used. Some applets require
the use of applet
.
Furthermore, Navigator 4 and earlier and Internet Explorer 4 do
not support Java applets via the object
element. The applet
element may contain a number of
param
elements that provide
further instructions and parameters.
Attributes
Core
align="left|right|top|middle|bottom"
Aligns the applet and allows text to wrap around it (same as image alignment).
alt="
text
"
Provides alternate text if the applet cannot be displayed.
archive="
URLs
"
Provides a space-separated list of URLs with classes to be preloaded.
code="
class
"
Required. Specifies the class name of the code to be executed.
codebase="
URL
"
URL from which the applet code is retrieved.
height="
number
"
Height of the initial applet display area in pixels.
hspace="
number
"
Deprecated. Specifies the number of pixels of clear space to the left and right of the applet window.
name="
text
"
Deprecated in XHTML 1.0. Names the applet for reference from elsewhere on the page.
object="
text
"
This attribute names a resource containing a serialized representation of an applet’s state. Use either
code
orobject
in anapplet
element, but not both.vspace="
number
"
Deprecated. Specifies the number of pixels of clear space above and below the applet window.
width=" ...
Get HTML and XHTML Pocket Reference, 3rd Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.
O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.