No.
Generally, anything written in java will transfer over to another operating system.
Definitely. Since Minecraft is primarily Java based, it will run on almost any operating system.
Install the Java Runtime Environment (JRE) for your operating system, then open the Structure Planner Jar file.
The whole idea of Java is to work with multiple platforms. It is probably more common on Microsoft Windows, simply because more people use that. But applications written with Java should be developed so that they work not only with Microsoft Windows, but with any operating system.The whole idea of Java is to work with multiple platforms. It is probably more common on Microsoft Windows, simply because more people use that. But applications written with Java should be developed so that they work not only with Microsoft Windows, but with any operating system.The whole idea of Java is to work with multiple platforms. It is probably more common on Microsoft Windows, simply because more people use that. But applications written with Java should be developed so that they work not only with Microsoft Windows, but with any operating system.The whole idea of Java is to work with multiple platforms. It is probably more common on Microsoft Windows, simply because more people use that. But applications written with Java should be developed so that they work not only with Microsoft Windows, but with any operating system.
The same way it would work elsewhere.
To install Google play store you need Android operating system, it's just simply won't work on other system. Since your phone is java or nucleus which is not very common, I don't think there will be any way, or any that i know of.
The language is platform independent. If I develop a program on my Windows computer using Java, the same program will work on a Mac or Linux/Unix computer without further modification. Java is also useful for developing applications on mobile devices, many of todays current cell phones use a Java based operating system.
As long as there is support for it, Javascript will work on all browsers and all Operating Systems
The word "platform" in this context refers to the environment - the combination of hardware and software - on which a program runs. For example, some programs are designed to work specifically on Intel processors, and on the Microsoft Windows operating system. In the case of Java, programs written in Java are designed to work on a special program called the Java Virtual Machine (JVM) - this would be the platform. Since JVM programs have been created for many operating systems and processors, programs written in the Java language can run on many operating systems as well. You might say that it is "multiplatform", but you might also say that the "platform" is the JVM. Note that in this case "platform" does NOT refer to the Java programming language, but specifically to the JVM.
Games written for the Windows operating system require the Windows operating system to work. If the Mac has Windows installed on it then it will work otherwise it will not work.
Java was developed to be run on any OS. The existence of the Java Virtual Machine means that only the JVM has to be ported to different platforms, so Java source code can be run on any of those platforms without any change.(If the question was asking what system Java was developed on, then I don't know for sure. But since it was developed at Sun Microsystems, one could safely assume it was written in some version of Solaris.)
NO