Java Applet - Introduction and its life-cycle - CodeSteps.
The java.applet package provides support for running an applet in the context of a World Wide Web browser. It consists of one class (Applet) and three interfaces (AppletContext, AudioClip, and AppletStub). The Applet class supports the “applet life cycle” methods (init(), start(), stop(), destroy()) that you override to write an applet.
The project brief may include: A description of the client. A description of the client's brand, culture and organisation. A description of the client's vision, mission and objectives. A description of the client's priorities and the criteria that will be used to measure success. Organisational structure and decision making processes.
Description of Applet Life Cycle methods Even though, the methods are called automatically by the browser, the programmer should know well when they are called and what he can do with the methods. Following is the schematic representation of the methods.
The water cycle describes how water evaporates from the surface of the earth, rises into the atmosphere, cools and condenses into rain or snow in clouds, and falls again to the surface as precipitation.
In computing, an applet is any small application that performs one specific task that runs within the scope of a dedicated widget engine or a larger program, often as a plug-in. The term is frequently used to refer to a Java applet, a program written in the Java programming language that is designed to be placed on a web page.Applets are typical examples of transient and auxiliary applications.
The water cycle is the journey water takes as it moves from the land to the sky and back again. It follows a cycle of evaporation, condensation, precipitation and collection.
An applet isn't a tiny apple (nor is it related to Apple technology). It's a small Java program that runs on the web. In this lesson, we'll define the Java applet and provide a working code example.