Note: There are two ways to navigate this guide:
Chapter 1: OverviewWhat Is Java Plug-in? What Does It Support? Chapter 2: Using the Conventional Applet Tag Chapter 3: Using OBJECT, EMBED and APPLET Tags in Java Plug-in Chapter 4: Using the HTML Converter to Convert Applet Tags for Java Plug-in Chapter 5: Proxy Configuration Chapter 6: Protocol Support: HTTP, HTTPS, FTP, GOPHER, SOCKS, and NTLM Chapter 7: Cookie Support Chapter 8: Applet Caching Chapter 9: Using the Java Plug-in Control Panel to Set Plug-in Behavior/Options
Chapter 10: Installation for Conventional Applets (Microsoft Windows Only) Chapter 11: Intranet With OBJECT/EMBED Tag Chapter 12: Internet Deployment Chapter 13: Silent Installation Chapter 14: Jar Indexing Chapter 15: Java Server Pages
OBJECT/EMBED
Chapter 16: OverviewApplet Security Basics Chapter 17: How RSA Signed Applet Verification Works in Java Plug-in Chapter 18: How to Sign Applets Using RSA-Signed Certificates Chapter 19: How to Deploy RSA-Signed Applets in Java Plug-in
Chapter 20: Debugging Support Chapter 21: Java Plug-in Console Chapter 22: Tracing and Logging
Chapter 23: Supporting Multiple Versions of JRE/Java Plug-in Chapter 24: Java-to-JavaScript Communication Chapter 25: JavaScript-to-Java Communication (Scripting) Chapter 26: Deploying Java Extensions Chapter 27: Applet Persistence API Chapter 28: Special Applet Attributes
Appendix 1: Netscape 6 Appendix 2: Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) Basic Information FAQ Developer Information FAQ Troubleshooting FAQ About Applet Tag Support in Java Plug-in Appendix 3: More About HTML Converter Appendix 4: Microsoft VM and Java 2 Applet Compatibility Issues Appendix 5: Complete ExampleDeploying Java Media Framework as Java Extension Appendix 6: Sun-Supported Specification-Version and Implemenation-Version Formats
Specification-Version
Implemenation-Version