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This page guides you through the four questions you should ask as you implement parameters:
- What should the applet let the user configure?
- What should the parameters be named?
- What kind of value should each parameter take?
- What should the default value of each parameter be?
It ends with a discussion of the parameters defined by an example class named AppletButton.
The parameters your applet should support depend on what your applet does and on how flexible you want it to be. Applets that display images might have parameters to specify the image locations. Similarly, applets that play sounds might have parameters to specify the sounds.Besides parameters that specify resource locations (such as image and sound files), applets sometimes provide parameters for specifying details of the applet's appearance or operation. For example, an animation applet might let the user specify the number of images shown per second. Or an applet might let the user change the strings the applet displays. Anything is possible.
Once you decide what parameters your applet will support, you need to figure out their names. Here are some typical parameter names:
- SOURCE or SRC
- For a data file such as an image file.
- XXXSOURCE (for example, IMAGESOURCE)
- Used in applets that let the user specify more than one type of data file.
- XXXS
- For a parameter that takes a list of XXXs (where XXX might be
IMAGE
, again).- NAME
- Used only for an applet's name. Applet names are used for interapplet communication, as described in Sending Messages to Other Applets. ) .
Clarity of names is more important than keeping the name length short. Do not use names of
<APPLET>
tag attributes, which are documented in The <APPLET> Tag.
Note: Although this tutorial usually refers to parameter names using ALL UPPERCASE, parameter names are case-insensitive. For example,IMAGESOURCE
andimageSource
both refer to the same parameter. Parameter values, on the other hand, are case-sensitive unless you take steps interpret them otherwise, such as by using theString toLowerCase
method before interpreting the parameter's value.
Parameter values are all strings. Whether or not the user puts quotation marks around a parameter value, that value is passed to your applet as a string. However, your applet can interpret the string in many ways.Applets typically interpret a parameter value as one of the following types:
- A URL
- An integer
- A floating-point number
- A boolean value -- typically "true"/"false" or "yes"/"no"
- A string -- for example, the string to use as a window title
- A list of any of the above
Applets should attempt to provide useful default values for each parameter, so that the applet will execute even if the user doesn't specify a parameter or specifies it incorrectly. For example, an animation applet should provide a reasonable setting for the number of images it displays per second. This way, if the user doesn't specify the relevant parameter, the applet will still work well.
AppletButton
Throughout this tutorial, applets that need to bring up windows use the highly configurableAppletButton
class.One page alone -- Getting Started -- uses
Note: If you're using 1.1 or 1.2, you should look at the Swing version ofAppletButton.java
.AppletButton
five times for five different examples, one per layout manager the AWT provides.AppletButton
's GUI is simple, consisting of a button and a label that displays status. When the user clicks the button, the applet brings up a window.The
AppletButton
class is so flexible because it defines parameters that let the user specify any or all of the following:
- The type of window to bring up
- The window's title
- The window's height
- The window's width
- The label of the button that brings up the window
Here's what a typical <APPLET> tag for AppletButton looks like. You can see this applet running at the URL Getting Started.
<APPLET CODE=AppletButton.class CODEBASE=example WIDTH=350 HEIGHT=60> <PARAM NAME=windowClass VALUE=BorderWindow> <PARAM NAME=windowTitle VALUE="BorderLayout"> <PARAM NAME=buttonText VALUE="Click here to see a BorderLayout in action"> </APPLET>When the user doesn't specify a value for a parameter,
AppletButton
uses a reasonable default value. For example, if the user doesn't specify the window's title,AppletButton
uses the window's type as the title.The next page shows you the code
AppletButton
uses to get its parameter values from the user.
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