These examples add an event listener for the HTMLMediaElement's
suspend
event, then post a message when that event handler has reacted to the event firing.
Using
addEventListener()
:
const
video
=
document
.
querySelector
(
"video"
)
;
video
.
addEventListener
(
"suspend"
,
(
event
)
=>
{
console
.
log
(
"Data loading has been suspended."
)
;
}
)
;
Using the
onsuspend
event handler property:
const
video
=
document
.
querySelector
(
"video"
)
;
video
.
onsuspend
=
(
event
)
=>
{
console
.
log
(
"Data loading has been suspended."
)
;
}
;