Please do have a look at this upload, the simple mark-up language launcher for glorious Java Applet SweetHome3D (a freeware graphic designer app). And I can attest the launcher, which opens with Windows Shell supposedly (image of its Properties see attached), leads to dependable operation of the...
Yeah I said XP but this is actually technically Vista. The applet is still malfunctioning oddly, still working on it. NOTE the javascript on-click invocation inside Start Papalot.html - study that, yet I run it without that using only the platform-autogenerated launcher, papalot.html. Note that...
Of course people here are welcome to use the game Papalot which I've uploaded since it's freeware. You can waste some serious time doing so, but it may not be suited to all temperaments. Just a note that even under WXP I was able to get it fully operational (there are just a few pixels missing...
Okay - crisis over. I don't know why the game runs imperfectly under WXP but I've now tried it under Windows-10, using appletviewer.exe, and it works wonderfully. Thanks all for being there! :lol:
More information: I realize now that the only files that matter to run the game are papalot.html and the subfolder named "classes". In the package I've uploaded there is also a Start_Papalot.html and a subfolder "images" which merely constitute the playing instructions.
I will reward the person...
Some limited success now that I've located appletviewer.exe. It's a simple matter more-or-less to get JDK's appletviewer.exe to run my papalot.html; I had to move my package's HTML launcher file plus 2 sub-folders into the directory /bin where JDK keeps appletviewer and other crucial DLLs that...
Changes nothing but yes there is appletviewer.exe file included within recent download of JDK. I don't know how I missed that... getting old, no doubt. Anyway, I don't know how to invoke the app properly, like from a Run command line. Just double-clicking it does nada.
I have an enjoyable Java game, a fun strategy game with many challenging levels, authored by famed Czech programmer Pavel Richter who devised the top-notch time-killing game Babala for Linux or Windows (with 300 levels). This game is called Papalot (The Primitives). It used to run flawlessly...