Hey, someone asked me to make a small website that looks like an old tv-set where you can switch pages by using the tv's buttons. Okay, I figured I'd tackle this using javascript for the buttons and dhtml to change the contents of the "screen". Now, I felt that just the buttons didn't really provide a clear interface, so I figured would use dhtml so that, when you hover over one of the buttons, an image appears that says what that button is for. Strange thing is, I simply cannot get the image to remain static as long as I want it to disappear when the user stops hovering over the button. Onmouseover and onmouseout events simply follow eachother as fast as they can, both in IE and in FF. Here's the relevant code:HTML:<div id="button1" onmouseover="textbubble1('325px', '479px','textbubble','button1.gif')" onmouseout="antitextbubble()"></div>JS:function textbubble1(margelinks, margetop, layer, imageUrl){document.getElementById('textbubble').style.display="block";document.getElementById('textbubble').style.left=margelinks;document.getElementById('textbubble').style.top=margetop;setBackgroundImage(layer,imageUrl);}function antitextbubble(){document.getElementById('textbubble').style.display="none";}function setBackgroundImage( layer, imageUrl ) { if( document.getElementById ) { return document.getElementById( layer ).style.backgroundImage = "url("+imageUrl+")"; } else if( document.all ) { return document.all[layer].style.backgroundImage = "url("+imageUrl+")"; } else { return document[layer].background.src = imageUrl; }}CSS:#textbubble {position: absolute;min-width: 420px;width: 420px;min-height: 300px;height: 300px;Z-index: 2;left: 325px;top: 481px;display: none;}#button1 {position: absolute;min-width: 30px;top: 535px;min-height: 30px;width: 30px;height: 30px;left: 260px;Z-index: 1;}I'm aware there may be some redundancy, as I'm still new to this whole business, but I don't think that's causing the issue. ######, I recently made another website with similar mouseover background changes and those work fine. I really can't pinpoint the difference, so I would be very much obliged if someone else could.