I use Processing. I don’t see any call to Swing in the Java code exported by Processing... so I think that I don’t need swing for now, at least in my current application.

Would you have an idea of the solution that I could explore as a priority?

Thank you very much for your response
:)


Le 08/01/2026 à 22:50, Joseph Huber via users a écrit :

I don’t know what your Java application entails, but I have used Webswing successfully with my NetBeans RCP applications (heavy use of Swing) built on top of the NetBeans platform.

https://www.webswing.org/en

I didn’t have to make changes to the NetBeans code, but did have to do some fiddling with the Webswing setup, as my applications store configuration and job files locally.  If you aren’t using any Swing components, then Webswing likely isn’t the right solution, or at the least, would be overkill.

Thank You!

Joe Huber

Standard Refrigeration LLC

*From:*Faramir KAZ <[email protected]>
*Sent:* Thursday, January 8, 2026 2:58 PM
*To:* [email protected]
*Subject:* export java to a browser


        

You don't often get email from [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>. Learn why this is important <https://aka.ms/LearnAboutSenderIdentification>

        

Hello,

I saw that there were several solutions to export a Java program to make it work in a browser.
Has anyone ever done this from Netbeans?

:)

Reply via email to