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A Java applet that was created as supplementary demonstration material for a scientific publication A Java applet that uses 3D hardware acceleration to visualize 3D files in .pdb format downloaded from a server [1] Using applet for nontrivial animation illustrating biophysical topic (randomly moving ions pass through voltage gates) [2] Using a ...
The JME Molecule Editor is a molecule editor Java applet with which users make and edit drawings of molecules and reactions (including generating substructure queries), and can display molecules within an HTML page. [1] The editor can generate Daylight simplified molecular-input line-entry system (SMILES) or MDL Molfiles of the created structures.
MicroEmulator lacks support for few Java APIs and JSRs often used in j2ME games (and implemented in other emulators and MicroEmulator forks): Mobile 3D Graphics API (M3G 1.0/1.1, JSR 184) [18] [19] [20] Scalable 2D Vector Graphics API (SVG, JSR 226) [21] Java bindings for OpenGL ES (JSR 239) Mobile 3D Graphics API 2.0 (M3G 2.0, JSR 297)
The word applet was first used in 1990 in PC Magazine. [2] However, the concept of an applet, or more broadly a small interpreted program downloaded and executed by the user, dates at least to RFC 5 (1969) by Jeff Rulifson, which described the Decode-Encode Language, which was designed to allow remote use of the oN-Line System over ARPANET, by downloading small programs to enhance the ...
Jmol is computer software for molecular modelling of chemical structures in 3 dimensions. [2] It is an open-source Java viewer for chemical structures in 3D [3]. The name originated from ava (the programming language) + [mol]ecules, and also the mol file format. JSmol is an implementation in JavaScript of the functionality of Jmol. [4]
Java Card bytecode run by the Java Card Virtual Machine is a functional subset of Java 2 bytecode run by a standard Java Virtual Machine but with a different encoding to optimize for size. A Java Card applet thus typically uses less bytecode than the hypothetical Java applet obtained by compiling the same Java source code.
Java is a high-level, class-based, object-oriented programming language that is designed to have as few implementation dependencies as possible. It is a general-purpose programming language intended to let programmers write once, run anywhere (), [16] meaning that compiled Java code can run on all platforms that support Java without the need to recompile. [17]
Cortado is a streaming Java applet for Ogg formats Vorbis, Theora and Kate, μ-law, MJPEG and Smoke (a custom MJPEG variant), released under the GPL.With Cortado a webpage can be set up to download the applet on the fly in the background, providing embedded support for Ogg-based media in Java-enabled web browsers without the need to install further software.