@magalter I will not give you the fish, the idea is to teach you how to fish :) Chances are IE will crash sites you work on in the future too. Learning to do this sort of tedious debugging process with
alert
statements, disabling scripts and such is important. Once you get good at it it becomes less painful. It's also educational because it forces you to write modular code, and heavily unit, and integration test your code. I was in your position before, having to fix stuff in broken code that doesn't run in IE, it sucks, but working with it effectively made me a better developer. —
Benjamin Gruenbaum 21 secs ago