178

What's the javascript api for checking if an html5 audio element is currently playing?

1

13 Answers 13

218
function isPlaying(audelem) { return !audelem.paused; }

The Audio tag has a paused property. If it is not paused, then it's playing.

8
  • 51
    This is wrong answer. I am just working with it, and before the first start .paused is false.
    – Tomas
    Jul 30, 2012 at 10:49
  • 3
    @Tom you have a jsbin? I tried this and it seems like the correct answer.
    – Harry
    Aug 27, 2012 at 3:07
  • 4
    @Harry I was playing around with it more and it seems like in some browsers it does work and it some not. I guess it depends on implementation. But for all latest updates for chrome and firefox it seems to work, so This answer is correct for latest implementations.
    – Tomas
    Aug 27, 2012 at 4:39
  • 3
    listen for events! addEventListener('playing', func) and addEventListener('pause', func).
    – Kristian
    Oct 12, 2019 at 22:50
  • 3
    According to both the HTML Living Standard and the W3C HTML5 spec, "The paused attribute represents whether the media element is paused or not. The attribute must initially be true". Maybe @Harry and @Tomas found this not to be the case in 2012 because the specs were not clear at that point. BUT ... I couldn't find anything in the specs (not to say it's not there!) that says that the 'paused` attribute must be true when playback ends. Any views? Nov 6, 2019 at 11:19
61

You can check the duration. It is playing if the duration is more than 0 seconds and it is not paused.

var myAudio = document.getElementById('myAudioID');

if (myAudio.duration > 0 && !myAudio.paused) {

    //Its playing...do your job

} else {

    //Not playing...maybe paused, stopped or never played.

}
4
  • 2
    Personally I believe that !myAudio.paused||!myAudio.currentTime would do a better job.
    – m93a
    Mar 30, 2014 at 14:22
  • 18
    @m93a don't you mean !myAudio.paused || myAudio.currentTime ? Oct 2, 2014 at 14:10
  • 5
    Yes, should be !myAudio.paused || myAudio.currentTime. Never replied back it seems...
    – Parth
    Feb 22, 2016 at 16:40
  • 1
    @MalcolmOcean ty from 2023 <3 Feb 21 at 23:16
23

While I am really late to this thread, I use this implementation to figure out if the sound is playing:

service.currentAudio = new Audio();

var isPlaying = function () {
    return service.currentAudio
        && service.currentAudio.currentTime > 0
        && !service.currentAudio.paused
        && !service.currentAudio.ended
        && service.currentAudio.readyState > 2;
}

I think most of the flags on the audio element are obvious apart from the ready state which you can read about here: MDN HTMLMediaElement.readyState.

1
  • 1
    Doesn't work if audio was paused automatically by iOS when locked. Oct 20, 2019 at 16:05
14
document.getElementsByTagName('audio').addEventListener('playing',function() { myfunction(); },false); 

Should do the trick.

1
  • 2
    getElementsByTagName('audio')[0] because it returns collection, not one element
    – Mik
    Nov 29, 2021 at 22:06
9

Try this function! Audio playing would not be executed if the position is the beginning or ending

function togglePause() {
     if (myAudio.paused && myAudio.currentTime > 0 && !myAudio.ended) {
         myAudio.play();
     } else {
         myAudio.pause();
     }
}
4

I wondered if this code would work, and it amazingly did:

if (a.paused == false) {
/*do something*/
}

or you could write it as:

if (!a.paused == true) {
/*do something*/
}

if you want your IDE annoying you in JSfiddle.

2
  • Maybe you could also replace "paused" with "running" and it would still work Feb 10, 2021 at 4:01
  • Or you can just omit the "== true" part, and your IDE won't bug you. Nov 7, 2021 at 13:17
2

you can to use the onplay event.

var audio = document.querySelector('audio');
audio.onplay = function() { /* do something */};

or

var audio = document.querySelector('audio');
audio.addEventListener('play', function() { /* do something */ };
1
  • The second method seems to work best. Firefox, Linux Mint, in footer script. Apr 24, 2021 at 19:40
2

Try Out This Code:

    var myAudio = document.getElementById("audioFile"); 

    function playAudio() { 
          //audio.play(); 
          //console.log(audio.play())
           if (myAudio.paused && myAudio.currentTime >= 0 && !myAudio.started) {
         myAudio.play();
         console.log("started");
     } else {
         myAudio.pause();
     }
}
1
  • Hello and welcome to SO! While this code may answer the question, providing additional context regarding how and/or why it solves the problem would improve the answer's long-term value. Please read the tour, and How do I write a good answer? Dec 28, 2020 at 9:02
1

To check if audio is really start playing, especially if you have a stream, need to check audio.played.length to 1. It will be 1 only if audio is really start sounds. Otherwise will be 0. It's more like a hack, but that still works even in mobile browsers, like Safari and Chrome.

1

I do this way

    <button id="play">Play Sound</button>
<script>
    var sound = new Audio("path_to_sound.mp3")
    sound.loop = false;
    var play = document.getElementById("play")
    play.addEventListener("click", () => {
        if (!isPlaying()) {
            sound.play()
        } else {
            //sound.pause()  
        }
    })

    function isPlaying() {
        var infoPlaying = false
        var currentTime = sound.currentTime == 0 ? true : false
        var paused = sound.paused ? true : false
        var ended = !sound.ended ? true : false
        var readyState = sound.readyState == 0 ? true : false
        if (currentTime && paused && ended && readyState) {
            infoPlaying = true
        } else if (!currentTime && !paused && ended && !readyState) {
            infoPlaying = true
        }
      return infoPlaying
    }
</script>
0

I use this for play pause audio button

    var audio=$("audio").get[0];
    if (audio.paused || audio.currentTime == 0 || audio.currentTime==audio.duration){
//audio paused,ended or not started
            audio.play();
        } else {
//audio is playing
            audio.pause();
        }
-1

am using this jquery code withe tow button play and stop, play button is a play and pouse button

const help_p = new Audio("audio/help.mp3");//Set Help Audio Name
$('#help_play').click(function() {//pause-Play
if (help_p.paused == false) {
  help_p.pause();//pause if playing
} else {
  help_p.play();//Play If Pausing
}
});

$('#help_stop').click(function() {//Stop Button
  help_p.pause();//pause
  help_p.currentTime = 0; //Set Time 0
});
-3

While there is no method called isPlaying or something similar, there are a few ways to accomplish this.

This method gets the % of progress as audio is playing:

function getPercentProg() {
    var myVideo = document.getElementById('myVideo');
    var endBuf = myVideo.buffered.end(0);
    var soFar = parseInt((endBuf / myVideo.duration) * 100);
    document.getElementById('loadStatus').innerHTML =  soFar + '%';
}

If percent is greater than 0 and less than 100, it is playing, else it is stopped.

6
  • Erm, what if I pause the audio in the middle? Feb 25, 2012 at 13:31
  • 1
    Then it would not be playing.
    – Todd Moses
    Feb 25, 2012 at 15:02
  • This only detects the amount buffered. If, for instance, the audio element has begun buffering data but has not started playing because it doesn't have enough data, this method can still return true. Or if the element has buffered data as part of playback and subsequently was paused.
    – dhasenan
    Aug 30, 2012 at 5:36
  • getElementsByTagName('myVideo') ? i think it should be getElementById('myVideo')
    – Lucky Soni
    Feb 1, 2013 at 7:31
  • 2
    Em... Why minusing? A great idea, bad written though. How can you check if realtime audio (WebRTC) is playing with .paused? Only with buffer checking. Not deserved minusing. I upvote.
    – igorpavlov
    Dec 6, 2013 at 10:57

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