When I close my page on some browser I want a message box to appear and to ask me if I really want to close the page or not, with two buttons and if I click No
then this tab won't be closed.
How can I do that?
Select "Settings" from the drop-down menu. Click the "Extensions" tab, locate "Chrome Toolbox by Google," and then click the "Options" link under the description of the extension. Check the box next to "Confirm Before Closing Multiple Tabs" in the "Tabs" section to automatically update your browser's settings.
Close tabs quickly. Press Ctrl + W (Windows) or ⌘ Command + W (Mac) on your computer's keyboard to close the tab you're currently using. Make sure you're on the tab that you want to close before doing this.
To handle the browser tab close even in React: Use the useEffect hook to add an event listener. Listen for the beforeunload event. The beforeunload event is triggered when the tab is about to be unloaded.
You need to listen on the beforeunload
event.
Here's a kickoff example:
window.onbeforeunload = function() {
return "Hey, you're leaving the site. Bye!";
};
This message will show up in kind of a confirmation dialogue. This message will show up right before the client unloads the page. That can be a browser close, but that can also be a simple navigational action like clicking a link or submitting a form in the page!
You would most probably also like to turn it off (just set to null
) whenever an internal link is clicked or an internal form is submitted. You namely don't want to annoy endusers with unintuitive behaviour. You can do that by listening on the click
event of the desired links and the submit
event of the desired forms. jQuery may be of great help here since it does that in crossbrowsercompatible way so that you don't need to write >20 lines of JS code for this:
<script src="http://code.jquery.com/jquery-latest.min.js"></script>
<script>
window.onbeforeunload = function() {
return "You're leaving the site.";
};
$(document).ready(function() {
$('a[rel!=ext]').click(function() { window.onbeforeunload = null; });
$('form').submit(function() { window.onbeforeunload = null; });
});
</script>
You only need to give all external links the defacto standard attribute rel="ext"
to denote that those are external links.
<a href="http://google.com" rel="ext">Google</a>
onbeforeunload
fires before onunload
.
You can't cancel the event in onunload
. onbeforeunload
allows returning a string from events (e.g. window.onbeforeunload = function() {return "really leave now?"}
, and the browser will ask the user a question whether they want to leave your page. The page has no say in stopping the event if "Yes" is clicked (that's the way it should be too in my opinion.)
General points:
alert
, prompt
and confirm
aren't allowed in either events.WARNING: In IE6/7 at least (and possibly IE8 but not FF/Chrome etc) onbeforeunload
and onunload
are triggered when anchors/javascript links are clicked on. Some examples:
<a href="#myanchor">trigger unload!</a>
<a href="javascript: alert('message!')">trigger unload!</a>
(MSDN is as good a source as any, considering it's non-standard and that Firefox/Chrome/Safari seems to largely have copied the implementation from IE.)
use the onbeforeunload event
window.onbeforeunload = function(){
return "Are you sure you want to close the window?";
}
This will display a messagebox where the user can choose whether or not to close the window.
Note that this is not supported by Opera.
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