Several things you can correct there:
1) Don't use eval
to look up properties
var thissound= eval("document."+soundobj);
becomes
var thissound= document[soundobj];
2) But, if something has an id
, use document.getElementById
to look it up instead, so:
var thissound = document.getElementById(soundobj);
3) You don't use a javascript:
prefix on event handler attributes, so
<a href="#" onclick="javascript:EvalSound('sound1');">
becomes
<a href="#" onclick="EvalSound('sound1');">
(although that one is largely harmless, it just defines a label you never use). (You only use the javacript:
pseudo-protocol on link attributes, like href
.)
Update: You've indicated none of the above did it, so:
4) Is sound1
really unique?
Do you have anything else on the page called "sound1"? IE has issues with mixing together namespaces. Even just a variable with that name at page scope can cause issues.
Further update:
5) Can you use embed
with IE?
I'm not at all sure you can, I thought IE wanted object
rather than embed
. This page is interesting vis-a-vis playing sounds in IE, looks like IE may have a script built into it to load objects like this; looking at the content of the script may well help you figure out what you need to do.
X) Walk through it
Your best bet for figuring this out is to walk through the code with a debugger (IE8 has dev tools built in, or you can use the free version of VS.Net). That will help you narrow down where the problem is. It sounds (no pun) as though the sound1
element isn't being found, but really, it could be any of several things. If it's that the element isn't being found, my guess is that #5 is the culprit.
Possibly off-topic: You've tagged your question jquery
. If you're really using jQuery, you can probably get more use out of it than you currently seem to be. For instance, you could use jQuery to set up the event handler rather than using onclick
, which is very old-fashioned, and you could use jQuery instead of document.getElementById
although in this specific case it doesn't buy you anything.