Google Chrome Extension for blocking redirects - javascript

Using Chrome Extension, I want to stop a Webpage from redirecting to another page (Different URL). I need to stop the redirects but without displaying any alert message/popups. so when this extension is 'enabled' on google chrome. It will do the work of blocking the re-directs. Once the page loads fully, i.e. all the scripts, HTML are loaded etc only then 'ESC' or stop by default trigger. If not 'ESC' then some other way to stop re-direct without any pop-up or alerts.
As part of this, the example HTML code and my JS code reads:
var seconds = 3; // seconds for HTML
var foo; // variable for clearInterval() function
function redirect() {
document.location.href = 'http://bubencode.com';
}
function updateSecs() {
document.getElementById("seconds").innerHTML = seconds;
seconds--;
if (seconds == -1) {
clearInterval(foo);
redirect();
}
}
function countdownTimer() {
foo = setInterval(function () {
updateSecs()
}, 1000);
}
countdownTimer();
window.onbeforeunload = function() {return "Stop";}; //Alert
<p>You should be automatically redirected in <span id="seconds">3</span> seconds.
</p>
I am facing the following two issues or need help in:
window.onbeforeunload = function() {return "Stop";};
is not working.
Is there an alternate way to stop this redirect process with no browser alerts or pop-ups? I have used the following ESC keycode (27) but it also fails:
$(function() {
var e = $.Event('keypress');
e.which = 27
$('document').trigger(e);
});
I want to implement a chrome extension to automatically take care of this.
I need help in javascript code. The HTML code mentioned is just for the example.
I'm sorry if the question here is irrelevant. Please excuse me for the same.

Related

Ajax not getting executed on tab close [duplicate]

Is there any cross-browser JavaScript/jQuery code to detect if the browser or a browser tab is being closed, but not due to a link being clicked?
If I get you correctly, you want to know when a tab/window is effectively closed. Well, AFAIK the only way in JavaScript to detect that is to use either onunload or onbeforeunload events.
Unfortunately (or fortunately?), those events are also fired when you leave a site over a link or your browsers back button. So this is the best answer I can give, I don't think you can natively detect a pure close in JavaScript. Correct me if I'm wrong here.
From MDN Documentation
For some reasons, Webkit-based browsers don't follow the spec for the dialog box. An almost cross-working example would be close from the below example.
window.addEventListener("beforeunload", function (e) {
var confirmationMessage = "\o/";
(e || window.event).returnValue = confirmationMessage; //Gecko + IE
return confirmationMessage; //Webkit, Safari, Chrome
});
This example for handling all browsers.
Simple Solution
window.onbeforeunload = function () {
return "Do you really want to close?";
};
<body onbeforeunload="ConfirmClose()" onunload="HandleOnClose()">
var myclose = false;
function ConfirmClose()
{
if (event.clientY < 0)
{
event.returnValue = 'You have closed the browser. Do you want to logout from your application?';
setTimeout('myclose=false',10);
myclose=true;
}
}
function HandleOnClose()
{
if (myclose==true)
{
//the url of your logout page which invalidate session on logout
location.replace('/contextpath/j_spring_security_logout') ;
}
}
//This is working in IE7, if you are closing tab or browser with only one tab
For similar tasks, you can use sessionStorage to store data locally until the browser tab is closed.
The sessionStorage object stores data for only one session (the data is deleted when the browser tab is closed).(W3Schools)
This is my pen.
<div id="Notice">
<span title="remove this until browser tab is closed"><u>dismiss</u>.</span>
</div>
<script>
$("#Notice").click(function() {
//set sessionStorage on click
sessionStorage.setItem("dismissNotice", "Hello");
$("#Notice").remove();
});
if (sessionStorage.getItem("dismissNotice"))
//When sessionStorage is set Do stuff...
$("#Notice").remove();
</script>
I needed to automatically log the user out when the browser or tab closes, but not when the user navigates to other links. I also did not want a confirmation prompt shown when that happens. After struggling with this for a while, especially with IE and Edge, here's what I ended doing (checked working with IE 11, Edge, Chrome, and Firefox) after basing off the approach by this answer.
First, start a countdown timer on the server in the beforeunload event handler in JS. The ajax calls need to be synchronous for IE and Edge to work properly. You also need to use return; to prevent the confirmation dialog from showing like this:
window.addEventListener("beforeunload", function (e) {
$.ajax({
type: "POST",
url: startTimerUrl,
async: false
});
return;
});
Starting the timer sets the cancelLogout flag to false. If the user refreshes the page or navigates to another internal link, the cancelLogout flag on the server is set to true. Once the timer event elapses, it checks the cancelLogout flag to see if the logout event has been cancelled. If the timer has been cancelled, then it would stop the timer. If the browser or tab was closed, then the cancelLogout flag would remain false and the event handler would log the user out.
Implementation note: I'm using ASP.NET MVC 5 and I'm cancelling logout in an overridden Controller.OnActionExecuted() method.
I found a way, that works on all of my browsers.
Tested on following versions:
Firefox 57, Internet Explorer 11, Edge 41, one of the latested Chrome (it won't show my version)
Note: onbeforeunload fires if you leave the page in any way possible (refresh, close browser, redirect, link, submit..). If you only want it to happen on browser close, simply bind the event handlers.
$(document).ready(function(){
var validNavigation = false;
// Attach the event keypress to exclude the F5 refresh (includes normal refresh)
$(document).bind('keypress', function(e) {
if (e.keyCode == 116){
validNavigation = true;
}
});
// Attach the event click for all links in the page
$("a").bind("click", function() {
validNavigation = true;
});
// Attach the event submit for all forms in the page
$("form").bind("submit", function() {
validNavigation = true;
});
// Attach the event click for all inputs in the page
$("input[type=submit]").bind("click", function() {
validNavigation = true;
});
window.onbeforeunload = function() {
if (!validNavigation) {
// -------> code comes here
}
};
});
There is no event, but there is a property window.closed which is supported in all major browsers as of the time of this writing. Thus if you really needed to know you could poll the window to check that property.
if(myWindow.closed){do things}
Note:
Polling anything is generally not the best solution. The window.onbeforeunload event should be used if possible, the only caveat being that it also fires if you navigate away.
Sorry, I was not able to add a comment to one of existing answers, but in case you wanted to implement a kind of warning dialog, I just wanted to mention that any event handler function has an argument - event. In your case you can call event.preventDefault() to disallow leaving the page automatically, then issue your own dialog. I consider this a way better option than using standard ugly and insecure alert(). I personally implemented my own set of dialog boxes based on kendoWindow object (Telerik's Kendo UI, which is almost fully open-sourced, except of kendoGrid and kendoEditor). You can also use dialog boxes from jQuery UI. Please note though, that such things are asynchronous, and you will need to bind a handler to onclick event of every button, but this is all quite easy to implement.
However, I do agree that the lack of the real close event is terrible: if you, for instance, want to reset your session state at the back-end only on case of the real close, it's a problem.
$(window).unload( function () { alert("Bye now!"); } );
onunload is the answer for Chrome. According to caniuse its crossbrowser. But not all browsers react the same.
window.onunload = function(){
alert("The window is closing now!");
}
developer.mozilla.org
These events fire when the window is unloading its content and resources.
For Chrome:
onunload executes only on page close. It doesn't execute even on page refresh and on navigating to a different page.
For Firefox v86.0:
It wouldn't execute at all. Page refresh, navigating away, closing browser tab, closing browser, nothing.
Since no one has mentioned it yet (8+ years later): A WebSocket can be another effective way to detect a closed tab. As long as the tab is open and pointed at the host, the client is able to maintain an active WebSocket connection to the host.
Caveat: Please note that this solution is really only viable for a project if a WebSocket doesn't require any additional significant overhead from what you are already doing.
Within a sensible timeout period (e.g. 2 minutes), the server side can determine that the client has gone away after the WebSocket has disconnected and perform whatever action is desired such as removing uploaded temp files. (In my extremely specialized use-case, my goal was to terminate a localhost app server three seconds after the WebSocket connection drops and all CGI/FastCGI activity terminates - any other keep-alive connections don't affect me.)
I had problems getting the onunload event handler to work properly with beacons (as recommended by this answer). Closing the tab did not appear to trigger the beacon and open tabs triggered it in ways that could potentially cause problems. A WebSocket solved the problem I was running into more cleanly because the connection closes roughly around the same time that the tab closes and switching pages within the application simply opens a new WebSocket connection well within the delay window.
It can be used to alert the user if some data is unsaved or something like that. This method works when the tab is closed or when the browser is closed, or webpage refresh.
It won't work unless the user has not interacted with the webpage, this is a mechanism to fight malicious websites..... there will be no popup unless you atleast make a click or touch on the website window.
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
</head>
<body>
<form>
<textarea placeholder = "Write...."></textarea>
</form>
<script type="text/javascript">
window.addEventListener('beforeunload', function (e) {
e.returnValue = '';
});
</script>
</body>
</html>
window.onbeforeunload = function() {
console.log('event');
return false; //here also can be string, that will be shown to the user
}
window.addEventListener("beforeunload", function (e) {
var confirmationMessage = "tab close";
(e || window.event).returnValue = confirmationMessage; //Gecko + IE
sendkeylog(confirmationMessage);
return confirmationMessage; //Webkit, Safari, Chrome etc.
});
//Detect Browser or Tab Close Events
$(window).on('beforeunload',function(e) {
e = e || window.event;
var localStorageTime = localStorage.getItem('storagetime')
if(localStorageTime!=null && localStorageTime!=undefined){
var currentTime = new Date().getTime(),
timeDifference = currentTime - localStorageTime;
if(timeDifference<25){//Browser Closed
localStorage.removeItem('storagetime');
}else{//Browser Tab Closed
localStorage.setItem('storagetime',new Date().getTime());
}
}else{
localStorage.setItem('storagetime',new Date().getTime());
}
});
JSFiddle Link
Hi all, I was able to achieve 'Detect Browser and Tab Close Event' clicks by using browser local storage and timestamp. Hope all of you will get solved your problems by using this solution.
After my initial research i found that when we close a browser, the browser will close all the tabs one by one to completely close the browser. Hence, i observed that there will be very little time delay between closing the tabs. So I taken this time delay as my main validation point and able to achieve the browser and tab close event detection.
I tested it on Chrome Browser Version 76.0.3809.132 and found working
:) Vote Up if you found my answer helpful....
I have tried all above solutions, none of them really worked for me, specially because there are some Telerik components in my project which have 'Close' button for popup windows, and it calls 'beforeunload' event. Also, button selector does not work properly when you have Telerik grid in your page (I mean buttons inside the grid) So, I couldn't use any of above suggestions. Finally this is the solution worked for me.
I have added an onUnload event on the body tag of _Layout.cshtml. Something like this:
<body onUnload="LogOff()">
and then add the LogOff function to redirect to Account/LogOff which is a built-in method in Asp.Net MVC. Now, when I close the browser or tab, it redirect to LogOff method and user have to login when returns. I have tested it in both Chrome & Firefox. And it works!
function LogOff() {
$.ajax({
url: "/Account/LogOff",
success: function (result) {
}
});
}
window.onbeforeunload = function ()
{
if (isProcess > 0)
{
return true;
}
else
{
//do something
}
};
This function show a confirmation dialog box if you close window or refresh page during any process in browser.This function work in all browsers.You have to set isProcess var in your ajax process.
It is possible to check it with the help of window.closed in an event handler on 'unload' event like this, but timeout usage is required (so result cannot be guaranteed if smth delay or prevent window from closure):
Example of JSFiddle (Tested on lates Safari, FF, Chrome, Edge and IE11 )
var win = window.open('', '', 'width=200,height=50,left=200,top=50');
win.document.write(`<html>
<head><title>CHILD WINDOW/TAB</title></head>
<body><h2>CHILD WINDOW/TAB</h2></body>
</html>`);
win.addEventListener('load',() => {
document.querySelector('.status').innerHTML += '<p>Child was loaded!</p>';
});
win.addEventListener('unload',() => {
document.querySelector('.status').innerHTML += '<p>Child was unloaded!</p>';
setTimeout(()=>{
document.querySelector('.status').innerHTML += getChildWindowStatus();
},1000);
});
win.document.close()
document.querySelector('.check-child-window').onclick = ()=> {
alert(getChildWindowStatus());
}
function getChildWindowStatus() {
if (win.closed) {
return 'Child window has been closed!';
} else {
return 'Child window has not been closed!';
}
}
There have been updates to the browser to better tack the user when leaving the app. The event 'visibilitychange' lets you tack when a page is being hidden from another tab or being closed. You can track the document visibility state. The property document.visibilityState will return the current state. You will need to track the sign in and out but its closer to the goal.
This is supported by more newer browser but safari (as we know) never conforms to standards. You can use 'pageshow' and 'pagehide' to work in safari.
You can even use new API's like sendBeacon to send a one way request to the server when the tab is being closed and shouldn't expect a response.
I build a quick port of a class I use to track this. I had to remove some calls in the framework so it might be buggy however this should get you started.
export class UserLoginStatus
{
/**
* This will add the events and sign the user in.
*/
constructor()
{
this.addEvents();
this.signIn();
}
/**
* This will check if the browser is safari.
*
* #returns {bool}
*/
isSafari()
{
if(navigator && /Safari/.test(navigator.userAgent) && /Chrome/.test(navigator.userAgent))
{
return (/Google Inc/.test(navigator.vendor) === false);
}
return false;
}
/**
* This will setup the events array by browser.
*
* #returns {array}
*/
setupEvents()
{
let events = [
['visibilitychange', document, () =>
{
if (document.visibilityState === 'visible')
{
this.signIn();
return;
}
this.signOut();
}]
];
// we need to setup events for safari
if(this.isSafari())
{
events.push(['pageshow', window, (e) =>
{
if(e.persisted === false)
{
this.signIn();
}
}]);
events.push(['pagehide', window, (e) =>
{
if(e.persisted === false)
{
this.signOut();
}
}]);
}
return events;
}
/**
* This will add the events.
*/
addEvents()
{
let events = this.setupEvents();
if(!events || events.length < 1)
{
return;
}
for(var i = 0, length = events.length; i < length; i++)
{
var event = events[i];
if(!event)
{
continue;
}
event[1].addEventListener(event[0], event[3]);
}
}
/**
*
* #param {string} url
* #param {string} params
*/
async fetch(url, params)
{
await fetch(url,
{
method: 'POST',
body: JSON.stringify(params)
});
}
/**
* This will sign in the user.
*/
signIn()
{
// user is the app
const url = '/auth/login';
let params = 'userId=' + data.userId;
this.fetch(url, params);
}
/**
* This will sign out the user.
*/
signOut()
{
// user is leaving the app
const url = '/auth/logout';
let params = 'userId=' + data.userId;
if(!('sendBeacon' in window.navigator))
{
// normal ajax request here
this.fetch(url, params);
return;
}
// use a beacon for a more modern request the does not return a response
navigator.sendBeacon(url, new URLSearchParams(params));
}
}
My approach would be along these lines:
Listen for changes in the url with onpopstate and set a sessionStorage variable with 1
Listen for page load and set that sessionStorage variable to 0
On beforeunload, check if the variable is 0. If so it means that the user is closing and not changing url.
This is still a roundabout way to go, but makes sense to me
As #jAndy mentioned, there is no properly javascript code to detect a window being closed.
I started from what #Syno had proposed.
I had pass though a situation like that and provided you follow these steps, you'll be able to detect it.
I tested it on Chrome 67+ and Firefox 61+.
var wrapper = function () { //ignore this
var closing_window = false;
$(window).on('focus', function () {
closing_window = false;
//if the user interacts with the window, then the window is not being
//closed
});
$(window).on('blur', function () {
closing_window = true;
if (!document.hidden) { //when the window is being minimized
closing_window = false;
}
$(window).on('resize', function (e) { //when the window is being maximized
closing_window = false;
});
$(window).off('resize'); //avoid multiple listening
});
$('html').on('mouseleave', function () {
closing_window = true;
//if the user is leaving html, we have more reasons to believe that he's
//leaving or thinking about closing the window
});
$('html').on('mouseenter', function () {
closing_window = false;
//if the user's mouse its on the page, it means you don't need to logout
//them, didn't it?
});
$(document).on('keydown', function (e) {
if (e.keyCode == 91 || e.keyCode == 18) {
closing_window = false; //shortcuts for ALT+TAB and Window key
}
if (e.keyCode == 116 || (e.ctrlKey && e.keyCode == 82)) {
closing_window = false; //shortcuts for F5 and CTRL+F5 and CTRL+R
}
});
// Prevent logout when clicking in a hiperlink
$(document).on("click", "a", function () {
closing_window = false;
});
// Prevent logout when clicking in a button (if these buttons rediret to some page)
$(document).on("click", "button", function () {
closing_window = false;
});
// Prevent logout when submiting
$(document).on("submit", "form", function () {
closing_window = false;
});
// Prevent logout when submiting
$(document).on("click", "input[type=submit]", function () {
closing_window = false;
});
var toDoWhenClosing = function() {
//write a code here likes a user logout, example:
//$.ajax({
// url: '/MyController/MyLogOutAction',
// async: false,
// data: {
// },
// error: function () {
// },
// success: function (data) {
// },
//});
};
window.onbeforeunload = function () {
if (closing_window) {
toDoWhenClosing();
}
};
};
try this,
I am sure this will work for you.
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script type='text/javascript'>
$(function() {
try{
opera.setOverrideHistoryNavigationMode('compatible');
history.navigationMode = 'compatible';
}catch(e){}
function ReturnMessage()
{
return "wait";
}
function UnBindWindow()
{
$(window).unbind('beforeunload', ReturnMessage);
}
$(window).bind('beforeunload',ReturnMessage );
});
</script>
Try this. It will work. jquery unload method is depreceted.
window.onbeforeunload = function(event) {
event.returnValue = "Write something clever here..";
};

Command Bar Menu Disappearing CRM

I am facing an issue in CRM, the bug is when I create an appointment and try to save it, the commandBar go invisible after the load of the created record of the appointment. I try to inspect the javascript associated code but there is no hint about the source of the problem, I should say that after refreshing the page of the created page the command bar become visible.
OnSave: function (e) {
EOZ.Appointment.SetPivotalId();
var eventArgs = e.getEventArgs();
if (Xrm.Page.ui.getFormType() == 1 && eventArgs.getSaveMode() == 1 && !saveAndClose) {
Xrm.Page.getAttribute("createdon").addOnChange(EOZ.Appointment.CreatedOnChanged);
}
else {
saveAndClose = true;
Xrm.Page.getAttribute("createdon").removeOnChange(EOZ.Appointment.CreatedOnChanged);
}
},
CreatedOnChanged : function () {
var id = Xrm.Page.data.entity.getId();
setTimeout(function () {
Xrm.Utility.openEntityForm("appointment", id);
}, 500);
}
NB : After a lot of javascript debugging, i noticed that the problem is only happened when the method "CreatedOnChanged" is called more than once, in the other hand if it's called just once the command bar is visible. I don't know if it's the source of the bug, but it is the only difference in the code's behaviour.
Edit :
Dynamics CRM 2013, Browser : Google chrome latest version on 03/03/2017
I modified my code to be like :
CreatedOnChanged : function () {
if(!isCalled){
var id = Xrm.Page.data.entity.getId();
setTimeout(function () {
Xrm.Utility.openEntityForm("appointment", id);
}, 500);
isCalled = true;
}
}
The method "CreatedOnChanged" is called multible times but its content is executed just once, and the command bar is displayed correctly ... But really i don't why when this method is executed multiple times, the command bar become hidden.
It look to me like you are trying to refresh the page after a save.
Rather than trying to reopen the form I think that forcing a refresh may be more correct:
Xrm.Page.data.refresh(true);
I think that you code around registering the event on the OnCreate() event is probably causing an error. The ribbon automatically refreshes after a save (so any visibility / enabling conditions or javascript can be retested.
A JavaScript error on the page would potentially cause the JavaScript re-rendering the ribbon to fail.

Detect Browser tab close event Clear php session [duplicate]

Is there any cross-browser JavaScript/jQuery code to detect if the browser or a browser tab is being closed, but not due to a link being clicked?
If I get you correctly, you want to know when a tab/window is effectively closed. Well, AFAIK the only way in JavaScript to detect that is to use either onunload or onbeforeunload events.
Unfortunately (or fortunately?), those events are also fired when you leave a site over a link or your browsers back button. So this is the best answer I can give, I don't think you can natively detect a pure close in JavaScript. Correct me if I'm wrong here.
From MDN Documentation
For some reasons, Webkit-based browsers don't follow the spec for the dialog box. An almost cross-working example would be close from the below example.
window.addEventListener("beforeunload", function (e) {
var confirmationMessage = "\o/";
(e || window.event).returnValue = confirmationMessage; //Gecko + IE
return confirmationMessage; //Webkit, Safari, Chrome
});
This example for handling all browsers.
Simple Solution
window.onbeforeunload = function () {
return "Do you really want to close?";
};
<body onbeforeunload="ConfirmClose()" onunload="HandleOnClose()">
var myclose = false;
function ConfirmClose()
{
if (event.clientY < 0)
{
event.returnValue = 'You have closed the browser. Do you want to logout from your application?';
setTimeout('myclose=false',10);
myclose=true;
}
}
function HandleOnClose()
{
if (myclose==true)
{
//the url of your logout page which invalidate session on logout
location.replace('/contextpath/j_spring_security_logout') ;
}
}
//This is working in IE7, if you are closing tab or browser with only one tab
For similar tasks, you can use sessionStorage to store data locally until the browser tab is closed.
The sessionStorage object stores data for only one session (the data is deleted when the browser tab is closed).(W3Schools)
This is my pen.
<div id="Notice">
<span title="remove this until browser tab is closed"><u>dismiss</u>.</span>
</div>
<script>
$("#Notice").click(function() {
//set sessionStorage on click
sessionStorage.setItem("dismissNotice", "Hello");
$("#Notice").remove();
});
if (sessionStorage.getItem("dismissNotice"))
//When sessionStorage is set Do stuff...
$("#Notice").remove();
</script>
I needed to automatically log the user out when the browser or tab closes, but not when the user navigates to other links. I also did not want a confirmation prompt shown when that happens. After struggling with this for a while, especially with IE and Edge, here's what I ended doing (checked working with IE 11, Edge, Chrome, and Firefox) after basing off the approach by this answer.
First, start a countdown timer on the server in the beforeunload event handler in JS. The ajax calls need to be synchronous for IE and Edge to work properly. You also need to use return; to prevent the confirmation dialog from showing like this:
window.addEventListener("beforeunload", function (e) {
$.ajax({
type: "POST",
url: startTimerUrl,
async: false
});
return;
});
Starting the timer sets the cancelLogout flag to false. If the user refreshes the page or navigates to another internal link, the cancelLogout flag on the server is set to true. Once the timer event elapses, it checks the cancelLogout flag to see if the logout event has been cancelled. If the timer has been cancelled, then it would stop the timer. If the browser or tab was closed, then the cancelLogout flag would remain false and the event handler would log the user out.
Implementation note: I'm using ASP.NET MVC 5 and I'm cancelling logout in an overridden Controller.OnActionExecuted() method.
I found a way, that works on all of my browsers.
Tested on following versions:
Firefox 57, Internet Explorer 11, Edge 41, one of the latested Chrome (it won't show my version)
Note: onbeforeunload fires if you leave the page in any way possible (refresh, close browser, redirect, link, submit..). If you only want it to happen on browser close, simply bind the event handlers.
$(document).ready(function(){
var validNavigation = false;
// Attach the event keypress to exclude the F5 refresh (includes normal refresh)
$(document).bind('keypress', function(e) {
if (e.keyCode == 116){
validNavigation = true;
}
});
// Attach the event click for all links in the page
$("a").bind("click", function() {
validNavigation = true;
});
// Attach the event submit for all forms in the page
$("form").bind("submit", function() {
validNavigation = true;
});
// Attach the event click for all inputs in the page
$("input[type=submit]").bind("click", function() {
validNavigation = true;
});
window.onbeforeunload = function() {
if (!validNavigation) {
// -------> code comes here
}
};
});
There is no event, but there is a property window.closed which is supported in all major browsers as of the time of this writing. Thus if you really needed to know you could poll the window to check that property.
if(myWindow.closed){do things}
Note:
Polling anything is generally not the best solution. The window.onbeforeunload event should be used if possible, the only caveat being that it also fires if you navigate away.
Sorry, I was not able to add a comment to one of existing answers, but in case you wanted to implement a kind of warning dialog, I just wanted to mention that any event handler function has an argument - event. In your case you can call event.preventDefault() to disallow leaving the page automatically, then issue your own dialog. I consider this a way better option than using standard ugly and insecure alert(). I personally implemented my own set of dialog boxes based on kendoWindow object (Telerik's Kendo UI, which is almost fully open-sourced, except of kendoGrid and kendoEditor). You can also use dialog boxes from jQuery UI. Please note though, that such things are asynchronous, and you will need to bind a handler to onclick event of every button, but this is all quite easy to implement.
However, I do agree that the lack of the real close event is terrible: if you, for instance, want to reset your session state at the back-end only on case of the real close, it's a problem.
$(window).unload( function () { alert("Bye now!"); } );
onunload is the answer for Chrome. According to caniuse its crossbrowser. But not all browsers react the same.
window.onunload = function(){
alert("The window is closing now!");
}
developer.mozilla.org
These events fire when the window is unloading its content and resources.
For Chrome:
onunload executes only on page close. It doesn't execute even on page refresh and on navigating to a different page.
For Firefox v86.0:
It wouldn't execute at all. Page refresh, navigating away, closing browser tab, closing browser, nothing.
Since no one has mentioned it yet (8+ years later): A WebSocket can be another effective way to detect a closed tab. As long as the tab is open and pointed at the host, the client is able to maintain an active WebSocket connection to the host.
Caveat: Please note that this solution is really only viable for a project if a WebSocket doesn't require any additional significant overhead from what you are already doing.
Within a sensible timeout period (e.g. 2 minutes), the server side can determine that the client has gone away after the WebSocket has disconnected and perform whatever action is desired such as removing uploaded temp files. (In my extremely specialized use-case, my goal was to terminate a localhost app server three seconds after the WebSocket connection drops and all CGI/FastCGI activity terminates - any other keep-alive connections don't affect me.)
I had problems getting the onunload event handler to work properly with beacons (as recommended by this answer). Closing the tab did not appear to trigger the beacon and open tabs triggered it in ways that could potentially cause problems. A WebSocket solved the problem I was running into more cleanly because the connection closes roughly around the same time that the tab closes and switching pages within the application simply opens a new WebSocket connection well within the delay window.
It can be used to alert the user if some data is unsaved or something like that. This method works when the tab is closed or when the browser is closed, or webpage refresh.
It won't work unless the user has not interacted with the webpage, this is a mechanism to fight malicious websites..... there will be no popup unless you atleast make a click or touch on the website window.
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
</head>
<body>
<form>
<textarea placeholder = "Write...."></textarea>
</form>
<script type="text/javascript">
window.addEventListener('beforeunload', function (e) {
e.returnValue = '';
});
</script>
</body>
</html>
window.onbeforeunload = function() {
console.log('event');
return false; //here also can be string, that will be shown to the user
}
window.addEventListener("beforeunload", function (e) {
var confirmationMessage = "tab close";
(e || window.event).returnValue = confirmationMessage; //Gecko + IE
sendkeylog(confirmationMessage);
return confirmationMessage; //Webkit, Safari, Chrome etc.
});
//Detect Browser or Tab Close Events
$(window).on('beforeunload',function(e) {
e = e || window.event;
var localStorageTime = localStorage.getItem('storagetime')
if(localStorageTime!=null && localStorageTime!=undefined){
var currentTime = new Date().getTime(),
timeDifference = currentTime - localStorageTime;
if(timeDifference<25){//Browser Closed
localStorage.removeItem('storagetime');
}else{//Browser Tab Closed
localStorage.setItem('storagetime',new Date().getTime());
}
}else{
localStorage.setItem('storagetime',new Date().getTime());
}
});
JSFiddle Link
Hi all, I was able to achieve 'Detect Browser and Tab Close Event' clicks by using browser local storage and timestamp. Hope all of you will get solved your problems by using this solution.
After my initial research i found that when we close a browser, the browser will close all the tabs one by one to completely close the browser. Hence, i observed that there will be very little time delay between closing the tabs. So I taken this time delay as my main validation point and able to achieve the browser and tab close event detection.
I tested it on Chrome Browser Version 76.0.3809.132 and found working
:) Vote Up if you found my answer helpful....
I have tried all above solutions, none of them really worked for me, specially because there are some Telerik components in my project which have 'Close' button for popup windows, and it calls 'beforeunload' event. Also, button selector does not work properly when you have Telerik grid in your page (I mean buttons inside the grid) So, I couldn't use any of above suggestions. Finally this is the solution worked for me.
I have added an onUnload event on the body tag of _Layout.cshtml. Something like this:
<body onUnload="LogOff()">
and then add the LogOff function to redirect to Account/LogOff which is a built-in method in Asp.Net MVC. Now, when I close the browser or tab, it redirect to LogOff method and user have to login when returns. I have tested it in both Chrome & Firefox. And it works!
function LogOff() {
$.ajax({
url: "/Account/LogOff",
success: function (result) {
}
});
}
window.onbeforeunload = function ()
{
if (isProcess > 0)
{
return true;
}
else
{
//do something
}
};
This function show a confirmation dialog box if you close window or refresh page during any process in browser.This function work in all browsers.You have to set isProcess var in your ajax process.
It is possible to check it with the help of window.closed in an event handler on 'unload' event like this, but timeout usage is required (so result cannot be guaranteed if smth delay or prevent window from closure):
Example of JSFiddle (Tested on lates Safari, FF, Chrome, Edge and IE11 )
var win = window.open('', '', 'width=200,height=50,left=200,top=50');
win.document.write(`<html>
<head><title>CHILD WINDOW/TAB</title></head>
<body><h2>CHILD WINDOW/TAB</h2></body>
</html>`);
win.addEventListener('load',() => {
document.querySelector('.status').innerHTML += '<p>Child was loaded!</p>';
});
win.addEventListener('unload',() => {
document.querySelector('.status').innerHTML += '<p>Child was unloaded!</p>';
setTimeout(()=>{
document.querySelector('.status').innerHTML += getChildWindowStatus();
},1000);
});
win.document.close()
document.querySelector('.check-child-window').onclick = ()=> {
alert(getChildWindowStatus());
}
function getChildWindowStatus() {
if (win.closed) {
return 'Child window has been closed!';
} else {
return 'Child window has not been closed!';
}
}
There have been updates to the browser to better tack the user when leaving the app. The event 'visibilitychange' lets you tack when a page is being hidden from another tab or being closed. You can track the document visibility state. The property document.visibilityState will return the current state. You will need to track the sign in and out but its closer to the goal.
This is supported by more newer browser but safari (as we know) never conforms to standards. You can use 'pageshow' and 'pagehide' to work in safari.
You can even use new API's like sendBeacon to send a one way request to the server when the tab is being closed and shouldn't expect a response.
I build a quick port of a class I use to track this. I had to remove some calls in the framework so it might be buggy however this should get you started.
export class UserLoginStatus
{
/**
* This will add the events and sign the user in.
*/
constructor()
{
this.addEvents();
this.signIn();
}
/**
* This will check if the browser is safari.
*
* #returns {bool}
*/
isSafari()
{
if(navigator && /Safari/.test(navigator.userAgent) && /Chrome/.test(navigator.userAgent))
{
return (/Google Inc/.test(navigator.vendor) === false);
}
return false;
}
/**
* This will setup the events array by browser.
*
* #returns {array}
*/
setupEvents()
{
let events = [
['visibilitychange', document, () =>
{
if (document.visibilityState === 'visible')
{
this.signIn();
return;
}
this.signOut();
}]
];
// we need to setup events for safari
if(this.isSafari())
{
events.push(['pageshow', window, (e) =>
{
if(e.persisted === false)
{
this.signIn();
}
}]);
events.push(['pagehide', window, (e) =>
{
if(e.persisted === false)
{
this.signOut();
}
}]);
}
return events;
}
/**
* This will add the events.
*/
addEvents()
{
let events = this.setupEvents();
if(!events || events.length < 1)
{
return;
}
for(var i = 0, length = events.length; i < length; i++)
{
var event = events[i];
if(!event)
{
continue;
}
event[1].addEventListener(event[0], event[3]);
}
}
/**
*
* #param {string} url
* #param {string} params
*/
async fetch(url, params)
{
await fetch(url,
{
method: 'POST',
body: JSON.stringify(params)
});
}
/**
* This will sign in the user.
*/
signIn()
{
// user is the app
const url = '/auth/login';
let params = 'userId=' + data.userId;
this.fetch(url, params);
}
/**
* This will sign out the user.
*/
signOut()
{
// user is leaving the app
const url = '/auth/logout';
let params = 'userId=' + data.userId;
if(!('sendBeacon' in window.navigator))
{
// normal ajax request here
this.fetch(url, params);
return;
}
// use a beacon for a more modern request the does not return a response
navigator.sendBeacon(url, new URLSearchParams(params));
}
}
My approach would be along these lines:
Listen for changes in the url with onpopstate and set a sessionStorage variable with 1
Listen for page load and set that sessionStorage variable to 0
On beforeunload, check if the variable is 0. If so it means that the user is closing and not changing url.
This is still a roundabout way to go, but makes sense to me
As #jAndy mentioned, there is no properly javascript code to detect a window being closed.
I started from what #Syno had proposed.
I had pass though a situation like that and provided you follow these steps, you'll be able to detect it.
I tested it on Chrome 67+ and Firefox 61+.
var wrapper = function () { //ignore this
var closing_window = false;
$(window).on('focus', function () {
closing_window = false;
//if the user interacts with the window, then the window is not being
//closed
});
$(window).on('blur', function () {
closing_window = true;
if (!document.hidden) { //when the window is being minimized
closing_window = false;
}
$(window).on('resize', function (e) { //when the window is being maximized
closing_window = false;
});
$(window).off('resize'); //avoid multiple listening
});
$('html').on('mouseleave', function () {
closing_window = true;
//if the user is leaving html, we have more reasons to believe that he's
//leaving or thinking about closing the window
});
$('html').on('mouseenter', function () {
closing_window = false;
//if the user's mouse its on the page, it means you don't need to logout
//them, didn't it?
});
$(document).on('keydown', function (e) {
if (e.keyCode == 91 || e.keyCode == 18) {
closing_window = false; //shortcuts for ALT+TAB and Window key
}
if (e.keyCode == 116 || (e.ctrlKey && e.keyCode == 82)) {
closing_window = false; //shortcuts for F5 and CTRL+F5 and CTRL+R
}
});
// Prevent logout when clicking in a hiperlink
$(document).on("click", "a", function () {
closing_window = false;
});
// Prevent logout when clicking in a button (if these buttons rediret to some page)
$(document).on("click", "button", function () {
closing_window = false;
});
// Prevent logout when submiting
$(document).on("submit", "form", function () {
closing_window = false;
});
// Prevent logout when submiting
$(document).on("click", "input[type=submit]", function () {
closing_window = false;
});
var toDoWhenClosing = function() {
//write a code here likes a user logout, example:
//$.ajax({
// url: '/MyController/MyLogOutAction',
// async: false,
// data: {
// },
// error: function () {
// },
// success: function (data) {
// },
//});
};
window.onbeforeunload = function () {
if (closing_window) {
toDoWhenClosing();
}
};
};
try this,
I am sure this will work for you.
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script type='text/javascript'>
$(function() {
try{
opera.setOverrideHistoryNavigationMode('compatible');
history.navigationMode = 'compatible';
}catch(e){}
function ReturnMessage()
{
return "wait";
}
function UnBindWindow()
{
$(window).unbind('beforeunload', ReturnMessage);
}
$(window).bind('beforeunload',ReturnMessage );
});
</script>
Try this. It will work. jquery unload method is depreceted.
window.onbeforeunload = function(event) {
event.returnValue = "Write something clever here..";
};

How get Browser Closing event in asp.net OR javascript [duplicate]

Is there any cross-browser JavaScript/jQuery code to detect if the browser or a browser tab is being closed, but not due to a link being clicked?
If I get you correctly, you want to know when a tab/window is effectively closed. Well, AFAIK the only way in JavaScript to detect that is to use either onunload or onbeforeunload events.
Unfortunately (or fortunately?), those events are also fired when you leave a site over a link or your browsers back button. So this is the best answer I can give, I don't think you can natively detect a pure close in JavaScript. Correct me if I'm wrong here.
From MDN Documentation
For some reasons, Webkit-based browsers don't follow the spec for the dialog box. An almost cross-working example would be close from the below example.
window.addEventListener("beforeunload", function (e) {
var confirmationMessage = "\o/";
(e || window.event).returnValue = confirmationMessage; //Gecko + IE
return confirmationMessage; //Webkit, Safari, Chrome
});
This example for handling all browsers.
Simple Solution
window.onbeforeunload = function () {
return "Do you really want to close?";
};
<body onbeforeunload="ConfirmClose()" onunload="HandleOnClose()">
var myclose = false;
function ConfirmClose()
{
if (event.clientY < 0)
{
event.returnValue = 'You have closed the browser. Do you want to logout from your application?';
setTimeout('myclose=false',10);
myclose=true;
}
}
function HandleOnClose()
{
if (myclose==true)
{
//the url of your logout page which invalidate session on logout
location.replace('/contextpath/j_spring_security_logout') ;
}
}
//This is working in IE7, if you are closing tab or browser with only one tab
For similar tasks, you can use sessionStorage to store data locally until the browser tab is closed.
The sessionStorage object stores data for only one session (the data is deleted when the browser tab is closed).(W3Schools)
This is my pen.
<div id="Notice">
<span title="remove this until browser tab is closed"><u>dismiss</u>.</span>
</div>
<script>
$("#Notice").click(function() {
//set sessionStorage on click
sessionStorage.setItem("dismissNotice", "Hello");
$("#Notice").remove();
});
if (sessionStorage.getItem("dismissNotice"))
//When sessionStorage is set Do stuff...
$("#Notice").remove();
</script>
I needed to automatically log the user out when the browser or tab closes, but not when the user navigates to other links. I also did not want a confirmation prompt shown when that happens. After struggling with this for a while, especially with IE and Edge, here's what I ended doing (checked working with IE 11, Edge, Chrome, and Firefox) after basing off the approach by this answer.
First, start a countdown timer on the server in the beforeunload event handler in JS. The ajax calls need to be synchronous for IE and Edge to work properly. You also need to use return; to prevent the confirmation dialog from showing like this:
window.addEventListener("beforeunload", function (e) {
$.ajax({
type: "POST",
url: startTimerUrl,
async: false
});
return;
});
Starting the timer sets the cancelLogout flag to false. If the user refreshes the page or navigates to another internal link, the cancelLogout flag on the server is set to true. Once the timer event elapses, it checks the cancelLogout flag to see if the logout event has been cancelled. If the timer has been cancelled, then it would stop the timer. If the browser or tab was closed, then the cancelLogout flag would remain false and the event handler would log the user out.
Implementation note: I'm using ASP.NET MVC 5 and I'm cancelling logout in an overridden Controller.OnActionExecuted() method.
I found a way, that works on all of my browsers.
Tested on following versions:
Firefox 57, Internet Explorer 11, Edge 41, one of the latested Chrome (it won't show my version)
Note: onbeforeunload fires if you leave the page in any way possible (refresh, close browser, redirect, link, submit..). If you only want it to happen on browser close, simply bind the event handlers.
$(document).ready(function(){
var validNavigation = false;
// Attach the event keypress to exclude the F5 refresh (includes normal refresh)
$(document).bind('keypress', function(e) {
if (e.keyCode == 116){
validNavigation = true;
}
});
// Attach the event click for all links in the page
$("a").bind("click", function() {
validNavigation = true;
});
// Attach the event submit for all forms in the page
$("form").bind("submit", function() {
validNavigation = true;
});
// Attach the event click for all inputs in the page
$("input[type=submit]").bind("click", function() {
validNavigation = true;
});
window.onbeforeunload = function() {
if (!validNavigation) {
// -------> code comes here
}
};
});
There is no event, but there is a property window.closed which is supported in all major browsers as of the time of this writing. Thus if you really needed to know you could poll the window to check that property.
if(myWindow.closed){do things}
Note:
Polling anything is generally not the best solution. The window.onbeforeunload event should be used if possible, the only caveat being that it also fires if you navigate away.
Sorry, I was not able to add a comment to one of existing answers, but in case you wanted to implement a kind of warning dialog, I just wanted to mention that any event handler function has an argument - event. In your case you can call event.preventDefault() to disallow leaving the page automatically, then issue your own dialog. I consider this a way better option than using standard ugly and insecure alert(). I personally implemented my own set of dialog boxes based on kendoWindow object (Telerik's Kendo UI, which is almost fully open-sourced, except of kendoGrid and kendoEditor). You can also use dialog boxes from jQuery UI. Please note though, that such things are asynchronous, and you will need to bind a handler to onclick event of every button, but this is all quite easy to implement.
However, I do agree that the lack of the real close event is terrible: if you, for instance, want to reset your session state at the back-end only on case of the real close, it's a problem.
$(window).unload( function () { alert("Bye now!"); } );
onunload is the answer for Chrome. According to caniuse its crossbrowser. But not all browsers react the same.
window.onunload = function(){
alert("The window is closing now!");
}
developer.mozilla.org
These events fire when the window is unloading its content and resources.
For Chrome:
onunload executes only on page close. It doesn't execute even on page refresh and on navigating to a different page.
For Firefox v86.0:
It wouldn't execute at all. Page refresh, navigating away, closing browser tab, closing browser, nothing.
Since no one has mentioned it yet (8+ years later): A WebSocket can be another effective way to detect a closed tab. As long as the tab is open and pointed at the host, the client is able to maintain an active WebSocket connection to the host.
Caveat: Please note that this solution is really only viable for a project if a WebSocket doesn't require any additional significant overhead from what you are already doing.
Within a sensible timeout period (e.g. 2 minutes), the server side can determine that the client has gone away after the WebSocket has disconnected and perform whatever action is desired such as removing uploaded temp files. (In my extremely specialized use-case, my goal was to terminate a localhost app server three seconds after the WebSocket connection drops and all CGI/FastCGI activity terminates - any other keep-alive connections don't affect me.)
I had problems getting the onunload event handler to work properly with beacons (as recommended by this answer). Closing the tab did not appear to trigger the beacon and open tabs triggered it in ways that could potentially cause problems. A WebSocket solved the problem I was running into more cleanly because the connection closes roughly around the same time that the tab closes and switching pages within the application simply opens a new WebSocket connection well within the delay window.
It can be used to alert the user if some data is unsaved or something like that. This method works when the tab is closed or when the browser is closed, or webpage refresh.
It won't work unless the user has not interacted with the webpage, this is a mechanism to fight malicious websites..... there will be no popup unless you atleast make a click or touch on the website window.
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
</head>
<body>
<form>
<textarea placeholder = "Write...."></textarea>
</form>
<script type="text/javascript">
window.addEventListener('beforeunload', function (e) {
e.returnValue = '';
});
</script>
</body>
</html>
window.onbeforeunload = function() {
console.log('event');
return false; //here also can be string, that will be shown to the user
}
window.addEventListener("beforeunload", function (e) {
var confirmationMessage = "tab close";
(e || window.event).returnValue = confirmationMessage; //Gecko + IE
sendkeylog(confirmationMessage);
return confirmationMessage; //Webkit, Safari, Chrome etc.
});
//Detect Browser or Tab Close Events
$(window).on('beforeunload',function(e) {
e = e || window.event;
var localStorageTime = localStorage.getItem('storagetime')
if(localStorageTime!=null && localStorageTime!=undefined){
var currentTime = new Date().getTime(),
timeDifference = currentTime - localStorageTime;
if(timeDifference<25){//Browser Closed
localStorage.removeItem('storagetime');
}else{//Browser Tab Closed
localStorage.setItem('storagetime',new Date().getTime());
}
}else{
localStorage.setItem('storagetime',new Date().getTime());
}
});
JSFiddle Link
Hi all, I was able to achieve 'Detect Browser and Tab Close Event' clicks by using browser local storage and timestamp. Hope all of you will get solved your problems by using this solution.
After my initial research i found that when we close a browser, the browser will close all the tabs one by one to completely close the browser. Hence, i observed that there will be very little time delay between closing the tabs. So I taken this time delay as my main validation point and able to achieve the browser and tab close event detection.
I tested it on Chrome Browser Version 76.0.3809.132 and found working
:) Vote Up if you found my answer helpful....
I have tried all above solutions, none of them really worked for me, specially because there are some Telerik components in my project which have 'Close' button for popup windows, and it calls 'beforeunload' event. Also, button selector does not work properly when you have Telerik grid in your page (I mean buttons inside the grid) So, I couldn't use any of above suggestions. Finally this is the solution worked for me.
I have added an onUnload event on the body tag of _Layout.cshtml. Something like this:
<body onUnload="LogOff()">
and then add the LogOff function to redirect to Account/LogOff which is a built-in method in Asp.Net MVC. Now, when I close the browser or tab, it redirect to LogOff method and user have to login when returns. I have tested it in both Chrome & Firefox. And it works!
function LogOff() {
$.ajax({
url: "/Account/LogOff",
success: function (result) {
}
});
}
window.onbeforeunload = function ()
{
if (isProcess > 0)
{
return true;
}
else
{
//do something
}
};
This function show a confirmation dialog box if you close window or refresh page during any process in browser.This function work in all browsers.You have to set isProcess var in your ajax process.
It is possible to check it with the help of window.closed in an event handler on 'unload' event like this, but timeout usage is required (so result cannot be guaranteed if smth delay or prevent window from closure):
Example of JSFiddle (Tested on lates Safari, FF, Chrome, Edge and IE11 )
var win = window.open('', '', 'width=200,height=50,left=200,top=50');
win.document.write(`<html>
<head><title>CHILD WINDOW/TAB</title></head>
<body><h2>CHILD WINDOW/TAB</h2></body>
</html>`);
win.addEventListener('load',() => {
document.querySelector('.status').innerHTML += '<p>Child was loaded!</p>';
});
win.addEventListener('unload',() => {
document.querySelector('.status').innerHTML += '<p>Child was unloaded!</p>';
setTimeout(()=>{
document.querySelector('.status').innerHTML += getChildWindowStatus();
},1000);
});
win.document.close()
document.querySelector('.check-child-window').onclick = ()=> {
alert(getChildWindowStatus());
}
function getChildWindowStatus() {
if (win.closed) {
return 'Child window has been closed!';
} else {
return 'Child window has not been closed!';
}
}
There have been updates to the browser to better tack the user when leaving the app. The event 'visibilitychange' lets you tack when a page is being hidden from another tab or being closed. You can track the document visibility state. The property document.visibilityState will return the current state. You will need to track the sign in and out but its closer to the goal.
This is supported by more newer browser but safari (as we know) never conforms to standards. You can use 'pageshow' and 'pagehide' to work in safari.
You can even use new API's like sendBeacon to send a one way request to the server when the tab is being closed and shouldn't expect a response.
I build a quick port of a class I use to track this. I had to remove some calls in the framework so it might be buggy however this should get you started.
export class UserLoginStatus
{
/**
* This will add the events and sign the user in.
*/
constructor()
{
this.addEvents();
this.signIn();
}
/**
* This will check if the browser is safari.
*
* #returns {bool}
*/
isSafari()
{
if(navigator && /Safari/.test(navigator.userAgent) && /Chrome/.test(navigator.userAgent))
{
return (/Google Inc/.test(navigator.vendor) === false);
}
return false;
}
/**
* This will setup the events array by browser.
*
* #returns {array}
*/
setupEvents()
{
let events = [
['visibilitychange', document, () =>
{
if (document.visibilityState === 'visible')
{
this.signIn();
return;
}
this.signOut();
}]
];
// we need to setup events for safari
if(this.isSafari())
{
events.push(['pageshow', window, (e) =>
{
if(e.persisted === false)
{
this.signIn();
}
}]);
events.push(['pagehide', window, (e) =>
{
if(e.persisted === false)
{
this.signOut();
}
}]);
}
return events;
}
/**
* This will add the events.
*/
addEvents()
{
let events = this.setupEvents();
if(!events || events.length < 1)
{
return;
}
for(var i = 0, length = events.length; i < length; i++)
{
var event = events[i];
if(!event)
{
continue;
}
event[1].addEventListener(event[0], event[3]);
}
}
/**
*
* #param {string} url
* #param {string} params
*/
async fetch(url, params)
{
await fetch(url,
{
method: 'POST',
body: JSON.stringify(params)
});
}
/**
* This will sign in the user.
*/
signIn()
{
// user is the app
const url = '/auth/login';
let params = 'userId=' + data.userId;
this.fetch(url, params);
}
/**
* This will sign out the user.
*/
signOut()
{
// user is leaving the app
const url = '/auth/logout';
let params = 'userId=' + data.userId;
if(!('sendBeacon' in window.navigator))
{
// normal ajax request here
this.fetch(url, params);
return;
}
// use a beacon for a more modern request the does not return a response
navigator.sendBeacon(url, new URLSearchParams(params));
}
}
My approach would be along these lines:
Listen for changes in the url with onpopstate and set a sessionStorage variable with 1
Listen for page load and set that sessionStorage variable to 0
On beforeunload, check if the variable is 0. If so it means that the user is closing and not changing url.
This is still a roundabout way to go, but makes sense to me
As #jAndy mentioned, there is no properly javascript code to detect a window being closed.
I started from what #Syno had proposed.
I had pass though a situation like that and provided you follow these steps, you'll be able to detect it.
I tested it on Chrome 67+ and Firefox 61+.
var wrapper = function () { //ignore this
var closing_window = false;
$(window).on('focus', function () {
closing_window = false;
//if the user interacts with the window, then the window is not being
//closed
});
$(window).on('blur', function () {
closing_window = true;
if (!document.hidden) { //when the window is being minimized
closing_window = false;
}
$(window).on('resize', function (e) { //when the window is being maximized
closing_window = false;
});
$(window).off('resize'); //avoid multiple listening
});
$('html').on('mouseleave', function () {
closing_window = true;
//if the user is leaving html, we have more reasons to believe that he's
//leaving or thinking about closing the window
});
$('html').on('mouseenter', function () {
closing_window = false;
//if the user's mouse its on the page, it means you don't need to logout
//them, didn't it?
});
$(document).on('keydown', function (e) {
if (e.keyCode == 91 || e.keyCode == 18) {
closing_window = false; //shortcuts for ALT+TAB and Window key
}
if (e.keyCode == 116 || (e.ctrlKey && e.keyCode == 82)) {
closing_window = false; //shortcuts for F5 and CTRL+F5 and CTRL+R
}
});
// Prevent logout when clicking in a hiperlink
$(document).on("click", "a", function () {
closing_window = false;
});
// Prevent logout when clicking in a button (if these buttons rediret to some page)
$(document).on("click", "button", function () {
closing_window = false;
});
// Prevent logout when submiting
$(document).on("submit", "form", function () {
closing_window = false;
});
// Prevent logout when submiting
$(document).on("click", "input[type=submit]", function () {
closing_window = false;
});
var toDoWhenClosing = function() {
//write a code here likes a user logout, example:
//$.ajax({
// url: '/MyController/MyLogOutAction',
// async: false,
// data: {
// },
// error: function () {
// },
// success: function (data) {
// },
//});
};
window.onbeforeunload = function () {
if (closing_window) {
toDoWhenClosing();
}
};
};
try this,
I am sure this will work for you.
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script type='text/javascript'>
$(function() {
try{
opera.setOverrideHistoryNavigationMode('compatible');
history.navigationMode = 'compatible';
}catch(e){}
function ReturnMessage()
{
return "wait";
}
function UnBindWindow()
{
$(window).unbind('beforeunload', ReturnMessage);
}
$(window).bind('beforeunload',ReturnMessage );
});
</script>
Try this. It will work. jquery unload method is depreceted.
window.onbeforeunload = function(event) {
event.returnValue = "Write something clever here..";
};

JavaScript code works on chrome and IE but not Firefox

I'm trying to run some small JavaScript code. I need to refresh data on a page (using a certain link) then I want to load that page with the updated data.
I basically have to open a link before opening the page to update the data due to the platform that I'm using.
I quickly wrote some JavaScript and tested it. It works perfectly in Internet Explorer and Google Chrome, but for some reason it seems like it's not running the while loop in Firefox. I'm not sure why it's not working as I looked up the syntax and it seems correct.
var refreshed = false;
while (refreshed != true) {
refreshpage = window.open('https://na10.salesforce.com/dash/dashboardRefresh');
refreshed = true;
refreshpage.close();
}
window.open('/dashboard', '__tab');
I tried using a timeout function for closing the window. But I'm not sure if I'm using it right. It will execute everything - including what's in the loop - but it never closes the window.
Here's the updated code:
var refreshed = false;
var timeOut = setTimeout(function() {
refreshpage.close();
}, 1000);
while (refreshed != true) {
refreshpage = window.open('https://na10.salesforce.com/dash/dashboardRefresh');
refreshed = true;
clearTimeout(timeOut);
}
window.open('/dashboard', '__tab');
From the original post:
Here is what I used to get it to work:
var refreshed = false;
while (refreshed != true) {
refreshpage = window.open('https://na10.salesforce.com/dash/dashboardRefresh');
refreshed = true;
var timeOut = setTimeout(function() {
refreshpage.close();
window.open('/dashboard', '__tab');
}, 500);
}

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