I have a javascript that plays audio in the browser, using the html5 <audio>
tag. It works fine in the iPhone browser, but not in Android. (Testing using a htc desire with android 2.1.) Anyone know why?
My code:
function playHTML5(sound, soundcv){
// sound = url to m4a audio file
// soundcv = div in which the audioplayer should go
var audio = document.createElement('audio');
audio.src = sound;
audio.controls = "controls";
if (currentSound != null){
soundcv.replaceChild(audio,currentSound);
} else {
soundcv.appendChild(audio);
}
currentSound = audio;
}
By the way, I am also trying to enlarge the audio button that shows up in the iphone (t开发者_如何学编程he default one is quite small), with no luck so far - would be grateful for any ideas!
The latest Android browser in FroYo does not yet support the HTML5 audio element. This is not a bug, rather a feature that has yet to be implemented. It may come in Gingerbread.
Update: The Gingerbread browser has the audio element.
Here is link to Google Android bug, which filed for lack of support of AUDIO tag in Android. Please, vote on it.
http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=10546
BTW, there is work around, which let you play natively MP3 in Android 1.6 .. 2.2, like that:
<video src="test.mp3" onclick="this.play();"></video>
I cannot figure this out either. BUT, this test page created by Apple plays HTML5 audio on the Android: http://www.apple.com/html5/showcase/audio
how did apple do it?
Have you checked your audio format ?
I was having trouble on my Kindle Fire, and found one small thing which seemed to fix it.
<audio>
<source src="someclip.mp3" type="audio/mpeg" />
</audio>
I had mistakenly been using "audio/mp3". I'm using a player without its native controls (using HTML5/JS).
I got this working on a project using trigger.io deploying to a Nexus 7 running Android Jellybean, but the audio only plays if I use absolute URLs at the moment. I'm not sure what the relative path is yet to use audio from within my project, but hopefully this will help somebody out...
(function() {
var currentSound;
// I have a div called "page"
var soundcv = document.body;
// This only works for one sound for simplicity's sake
function playSound(sound){
if (currentSound == null){
var audio = document.createElement('audio');
audio.src = sound;
soundcv.appendChild(audio);
currentSound = audio;
}
currentSound.play();
}
// This isn't a real audio file URL - replace it with one of your own
playSound('http://example.com/example.mp3');
})();
I've been tinkering all day on this and I finally got mine to work on my old Samsung Droid browser with the yahoo webplayer:
<a href="somefolder/file.mp3"></a>
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://webplayer.yahooapis.com/player.js"></script>
Works great puts a little arrow icon next to the text that you can click to play your mp3. Thanks Yahoo.
I forgot to mention that the audio does NOT show up in my Chrome or Firefox browser when testing this locally. Works great on my phone browser though.
I know this is a hack, but it works everywhere (as far as I know)!
You can use the video element and convert your mp3s into mp4 and ogg files (ogg for firefox on android). You could also style it so it doesn't display any uneccesary default players. See code below:
<video id="audioTest" width="1" height="1" style="top: -100px; left: -100px; position: absolute;" preload >
<source src="audio.mp4" type="video/mp4">
<source src="audio.ogv" type="video/ogg">
</video>
You could then play it in your js code using:
var audioTest = document.getElementById("audioTest");
audioTest.addEventListener("ended",onSoundComplete,false);
audioTest.play();
in body
<audio id="myAudio" src="audio/bomba.mp3"></audio>
in javascript during the event
document.getElementById('myAudio').play();
精彩评论