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** Reply to note from scoug-help@scoug.com Fri, 31
Aug 2001 22:11:12 PDT
> On Fri, 31 Aug 2001 19:41:44 PDT, Michael Rakijas
wrote:
>
> >Short version of question(s): What could prevent
a Java console from
> >displaying? What can I do to check my Java
installation?
>
> Rocky,
> Be sure that Netscape is pointing to your JAVA
installation. This information
> can be displayed by reviewing the "IBM Java
Properties" from the "OS/2
> Preferences" page in "Edit Preferences".
OK. Here's what I've done. Since I have other
machines that work and only the one that doesn't
work properly I took one that works as a baseline to
compare the non-working one to. They're basically
identical (W4FP14) only with different video cards.
The video cards shouldn't matter, however, because
another machine with the same video card works fine.
Both machines have the exact same IBM Java
Properties settings in Navigator as allows:
1) Javapath was set to C:\JAVA11\DLL\JAVAI.DLL
2) No Java options were set (although I tried the
-nojit option on the non-working machine once but it
didn't change anything)
3) Radio button to ignore changes to Classpath was
set with the following list:
c:\javaos2\lib\jempcl10.zip;.\.;c:\java11\lib\SecMA.
jar;
I checked the integrity of all three files against
one another on the two machines and they checked out
fine (both are running the most recent Hursley
updates).
Let me clarify what I mean by non-working, too.
Even the non-working machine reports itself as Java
compliant. I found a couple of test pages on the
net that say that the browser, even on the
non-working machine, is Java-enabled (i.e., "If you
can seen this, you are Java compliant" with some
silly little applet running in the browser window).
So, running Java within the Netscape window looks
okay. However, the Yahoo games require running the
Java apps within their own window and this is where
it stumbles. Anything where the icon in the upper
left corner of the window is the Java "J" instead
of, say, the Navigator ship's steering wheel is a
problem. That's probably why the Java console
doesn't come up. The console is apparently a Java
app itself. (To try it yourself, from Navigator, go
to the Communicator menu -> Tools -> Java console).
On the working machine it comes up fine but not the
non-working one.
> --gary
> =====================
> ggranat@earthlink.net
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