The this won't work inside the function since the function is called by the window object, therefore the this will refer to window.
If you want to wrap your code inside a function you must wrap that function, call it with the this set to the element or pass the this as a parameter:
<html>
<body>
<!-- call the function and set the this accordingly-->
<image src="foo.png" onload="(function(){...}).call(this)" />
<!-- pass the this as a parameter -->
<image src="foo.png" onload="(function(e){....})(this)" />
</body>
</html>
Yet this doesn't really make sense to me:
I have no control on the page itself (I only control the HTML string that the page will call),
Do you only have control over the img tags? If you can output abritary HTML, then why not just put something in a `script' tag?
Update
With a script block you could declare your function in there and then simply call it in the onload event.
<script>
function doIt(el) {
// code in here
console.log(el.id); // you could do stuff depending on the id
}
</script>
<image id="img1" src="foo.png" onload="doIt(this)" />
<image id="img2" src="foo.png" onload="doIt(this)" />
Now you need only one function for many images.
And if you need to get really fancy, you can setup your script tag to pull in jQuery or any other library.
<script src="somepathtojquery"></script>
<script>
// do jquery stuff in herep
If you need a lot of these handlers jQuery could do the job.
Still I'm asking my self when you have full control over the HTML why don't you use a library in the first place? :)