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Introduction
This article will be useful if you need to consume ASP.NET webservices from languages or platforms without .NET support. In this example, I am consuming a webservice from a Java applet, but it would take very little work to adapt my code to run as a Java application. Although I have only tested this on Windows XP, the code should run on other platforms, providing cross-platform client-side consumption of ASP.NET webservices.
I developed this solution because I needed to add complex client-side processing to my ASP.NET application. I did not want to have to cope with all of the slightly different JavaScript implementations used by the main browsers, and this led me to consider a Java applet.
This article shows you how to use a Java applet in your webpage and get it to communicate back to ASP.NET by consuming an XML webservice on the client.
This article will be useful if you need to consume ASP.NET webservices from languages or platforms without .NET support. In this example, I am consuming a webservice from a Java applet, but it would take very little work to adapt my code to run as a Java application. Although I have only tested this on Windows XP, the code should run on other platforms, providing cross-platform client-side consumption of ASP.NET webservices.
I developed this solution because I needed to add complex client-side processing to my ASP.NET application. I did not want to have to cope with all of the slightly different JavaScript implementations used by the main browsers, and this led me to consider a Java applet.
This article shows you how to use a Java applet in your webpage and get it to communicate back to ASP.NET by consuming an XML webservice on the client.
Bron: http://www.codeproject.com/KB/XML/WSfromJava.aspx