Another option maybe would be to use Rhino, which is a JavaScript 
interpreter for Java:  http://www.mozilla.org/rhino/
--Ted

On 28 Nov 00 13:15, Sean M. Burke wrote:
From: Sean M. Burke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> Liam Quinn wrote:
> > On Tue, 28 Nov 2000, Sean M. Burke wrote:
> > > At 02:23 PM 2000-11-28 -0200, Julian Monteiro wrote:
> > > >[...]
> > > >That's it. I'm trying to make a Robot who evaluate the Javascript
> > > >code, like most modern browsers, the mozilla SpiderMonkey can do that, no?
> > > >[...]
> > > And: I bet that some clever person could (or has already?) excised the JS
> > > interpreter from Mozilla, and could make it sort of stand on its own.
> > 
> > Already done: http://www.mozilla.org/js/spidermonkey/
> 
> Oh, so that's what that is.  Somewhere I got the crazy idea
> (probably from the name) that this was some sort of spidering
> system.
> 
> -- 
> Sean M. Burke    [EMAIL PROTECTED]    http://www.spinn.net/~sburke/
> 

---------------------------------------------------------------- 
    Ted Peterson                  |  IRE/NICAR 
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 "From then on, when anything went wrong with a computer, we 
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  at Harvard in 1945, quoted in Time 16 Apr 84.

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  the structure of the wind."  -- Keith Waldrop, 1975

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