To run the programs as an applet, the browser must have the Java virtual machine. The programs do not use swing and run on Java version 1.1 and any newer version. Java is a cross platform language, and as long as the virtual machine exists, it can be run on any browser. Frameworks and Trussworks place no limits on the number of members that can be added to the structure, but the RAM may impose a limit, as the number of members gets significantly larger.
To run the program as an application, the local machine must have the Java virtual machine that can be downloaded from the Sun’s web page. The earliest version of Java, which will work with Frameworks and Trussworks, is version 1.1. Similarly to running the programs as an applet, Frameworks and Trussworks place no limits on the number of members that can be added to the structure, but the RAM may impose a limit, as the number of members gets significantly larger.
To download the program, right click and save the ".jar" file to your local machine.
Next, go to the folder where you downloaded the ".jar" file, and at the command line, type the following
   jar xf frameworks.jar FrameWorks/Sections/data
This will extract the cross-sectional data into a "FrameWorks" directory. You only need to do this the first time that you download the program.
Finally, to run the application, type the following
   java -jar frameworks.jar
To download the server, right click and save the ".jar" file to your local machine.
Next, go to the folder where you downloaded the ".jar" file, and at the command line, type the following
  java -jar frameworksServer.jar
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To download the server, right click and save the ".jar" file to your local machine.
Next, go to the folder where you downloaded the ".jar" file, and at the command line, type the following
  jar xf frameworksSourceCode.jar
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