[java] How to open the default webbrowser using java

Can someone point me in the right direction on how to open the default web browser and set the page to "www.example.com" thanks

This question is related to java

The answer is


Its very simple just write below code:

String s = "http://www.google.com";
Desktop desktop = Desktop.getDesktop();
desktop.browse(URI.create(s));

or if you don't want to load URL then just write your browser name into string values like,

String s = "chrome";
Desktop desktop = Desktop.getDesktop();
desktop.browse(URI.create(s));

it will open browser automatically with empty URL after executing a program


For me solution with Desktop.isDesktopSupported() doesn't work (windows 7 and ubuntu). Please try this to open browser from java code:

Windows:

Runtime rt = Runtime.getRuntime();
String url = "http://stackoverflow.com";
rt.exec("rundll32 url.dll,FileProtocolHandler " + url);

Mac

Runtime rt = Runtime.getRuntime();
String url = "http://stackoverflow.com";
rt.exec("open " + url);

Linux:

Runtime rt = Runtime.getRuntime();
String url = "http://stackoverflow.com";
String[] browsers = { "epiphany", "firefox", "mozilla", "konqueror",
                                 "netscape", "opera", "links", "lynx" };

StringBuffer cmd = new StringBuffer();
for (int i = 0; i < browsers.length; i++)
    if(i == 0)
        cmd.append(String.format(    "%s \"%s\"", browsers[i], url));
    else
        cmd.append(String.format(" || %s \"%s\"", browsers[i], url)); 
    // If the first didn't work, try the next browser and so on

rt.exec(new String[] { "sh", "-c", cmd.toString() });

If you want to have multiplatform application, you need to add operation system checking(for example):

String os = System.getProperty("os.name").toLowerCase();

Windows:

os.indexOf("win") >= 0

Mac:

os.indexOf("mac") >= 0

Linux:

os.indexOf("nix") >=0 || os.indexOf("nux") >=0

As noted in the answer provided by Tim Cooper, java.awt.Desktop has provided this capability since Java version 6 (1.6), but with the following caveat:

Use the isDesktopSupported() method to determine whether the Desktop API is available. On the Solaris Operating System and the Linux platform, this API is dependent on Gnome libraries. If those libraries are unavailable, this method will return false.

For platforms which do not support or provide java.awt.Desktop, look into the BrowserLauncher2 project. It is derived and somewhat updated from the BrowserLauncher class originally written and released by Eric Albert. I used the original BrowserLauncher class successfully in a multi-platform Java application which ran locally with a web browser interface in the early 2000s.

Note that BrowserLauncher2 is licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License. If that license is unacceptable, look for a copy of the original BrowserLauncher which has a very liberal license:

This code is Copyright 1999-2001 by Eric Albert ([email protected]) and may be redistributed or modified in any form without restrictions as long as the portion of this comment from this paragraph through the end of the comment is not removed. The author requests that he be notified of any application, applet, or other binary that makes use of this code, but that's more out of curiosity than anything and is not required. This software includes no warranty. The author is not repsonsible for any loss of data or functionality or any adverse or unexpected effects of using this software.

Credits: Steven Spencer, JavaWorld magazine (Java Tip 66) Thanks also to Ron B. Yeh, Eric Shapiro, Ben Engber, Paul Teitlebaum, Andrea Cantatore, Larry Barowski, Trevor Bedzek, Frank Miedrich, and Ron Rabakukk

Projects other than BrowserLauncher2 may have also updated the original BrowserLauncher to account for changes in browser and default system security settings since 2001.


You can also use the Runtime to create a cross platform solution:

import java.awt.Desktop;
import java.net.URI;

public class App {

    public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
        String url = "http://stackoverflow.com";

        if (Desktop.isDesktopSupported()) {
            // Windows
            Desktop.getDesktop().browse(new URI(url));
        } else {
            // Ubuntu
            Runtime runtime = Runtime.getRuntime();
            runtime.exec("/usr/bin/firefox -new-window " + url);
        }
    }
}

I recast Brajesh Kumar's answer above into Clojure as follows:

(defn open-browser 
  "Open a new browser (window or tab) viewing the document at this `uri`."
  [uri]
  (if (java.awt.Desktop/isDesktopSupported)
    (let [desktop (java.awt.Desktop/getDesktop)]
      (.browse desktop (java.net.URI. uri)))
    (let [rt (java.lang.Runtime/getRuntime)]
      (.exec rt (str "xdg-open " uri)))))

in case it's useful to anyone.


Hope you don't mind but I cobbled together all the helpful stuff, from above, and came up with a complete class ready for testing...

import java.awt.Desktop;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.net.URI;
import java.net.URISyntaxException;

public class MultiBrowPop {

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        OUT("\nWelcome to Multi Brow Pop.\nThis aims to popup a browsers in multiple operating systems.\nGood luck!\n");

        String url = "http://www.birdfolk.co.uk/cricmob";
        OUT("We're going to this page: "+ url);

        String myOS = System.getProperty("os.name").toLowerCase();
        OUT("(Your operating system is: "+ myOS +")\n");

        try {
            if(Desktop.isDesktopSupported()) { // Probably Windows
                OUT(" -- Going with Desktop.browse ...");
                Desktop desktop = Desktop.getDesktop();
                desktop.browse(new URI(url));
            } else { // Definitely Non-windows
                Runtime runtime = Runtime.getRuntime();
                if(myOS.contains("mac")) { // Apples
                    OUT(" -- Going on Apple with 'open'...");
                    runtime.exec("open " + url);
                } 
                else if(myOS.contains("nix") || myOS.contains("nux")) { // Linux flavours 
                    OUT(" -- Going on Linux with 'xdg-open'...");
                    runtime.exec("xdg-open " + url);
                }
                else 
                    OUT("I was unable/unwilling to launch a browser in your OS :( #SadFace");
            }
            OUT("\nThings have finished.\nI hope you're OK.");
        }
        catch(IOException | URISyntaxException eek) {
            OUT("**Stuff wrongly: "+ eek.getMessage());
        }
    }

    private static void OUT(String str) {
        System.out.println(str);
    }
}

Here is my code. It'll open given url in default browser (cross platform solution).

import java.awt.Desktop;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.net.URI;
import java.net.URISyntaxException;

public class Browser {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        String url = "http://www.google.com";

        if(Desktop.isDesktopSupported()){
            Desktop desktop = Desktop.getDesktop();
            try {
                desktop.browse(new URI(url));
            } catch (IOException | URISyntaxException e) {
                // TODO Auto-generated catch block
                e.printStackTrace();
            }
        }else{
            Runtime runtime = Runtime.getRuntime();
            try {
                runtime.exec("xdg-open " + url);
            } catch (IOException e) {
                // TODO Auto-generated catch block
                e.printStackTrace();
            }
        }
    }
}

java.awt.Desktop is the class you're looking for.

import java.awt.Desktop;
import java.net.URI;

// ...

if (Desktop.isDesktopSupported() && Desktop.getDesktop().isSupported(Desktop.Action.BROWSE)) {
    Desktop.getDesktop().browse(new URI("http://www.example.com"));
}

on windows invoke "cmd /k start http://www.example.com" Infact you can always invoke "default" programs using the start command. For ex start abc.mp3 will invoke the default mp3 player and load the requested mp3 file.