32

I'm developing a web app that utilises JavaScript alert() and confirm() dialogue boxes.

How can I stop Chrome from showing this checkbox?

Is there a setting I can modify?

I know I could modify the source code, but I'd like it so that Chrome could still auto-update.

I don't need to worry about other browsers since the app only runs in Chrome.

I have admin access to the (Windows) machines that run the app.

0

6 Answers 6

42

You can't. It's a browser feature there to prevent sites from showing hundreds of alerts to prevent you from leaving.

You can, however, look into modal popups like jQuery UI Dialog. These are javascript alert boxes that show a custom dialog. They don't use the default alert() function and therefore, bypass the issue you're running into completely.

I've found that an apps that has a lot of message boxes and confirms has a much better user experience if you use custom dialogs instead of the default alerts and confirms.

7
  • 1
    I don't want to add a framework like jQuery. Also, there are a lot of alert() and confirm() boxes throughout the code. I don't want to reinvent the wheel, just to disable that checkbox. Jul 30, 2012 at 21:30
  • 1
    @DannyBeckett there are pure JS modals out there, too. The JS can be really minimal, it's just to show/hide a div. The rest is CSS. You can override the default alert/confirm functions with your own so you don't have to change your code.
    – sachleen
    Jul 30, 2012 at 21:33
  • 3
    By the way, you can easily override the existing alert function so all calls to alert() will use your custom modal popup instead of native. stackoverflow.com/questions/1729501/javascript-overriding-alert
    – sachleen
    Feb 13, 2013 at 7:01
  • 1
    @DannyBeckett so are you saying as a web dev I can modify the source code of Chrome used by my users? Cause if I can't...well then "You can't" May 14, 2014 at 16:30
  • 1
    @DeadlyChambers Read the question more thoroughly. May 14, 2014 at 22:36
10

This is what I ended up doing, since we have a web app that has multiple users that are not under our control...(@DannyBeckett I know this isn't an exact answer to your question, but the people that are looking at your question might be helped by this.) You can at least detect if they are not seeing the dialogs. There are few things you most likely want to change like the time to display, or what you are actually displaying. Remember this will only notify the user that they are have managed to click that little checkbox.

window.nativeAlert = window.alert;
window.alert = function (message) {
    var timeBefore = new Date();
    var confirmBool = nativeAlert(message);
    var timeAfter = new Date();
    if ((timeAfter - timeBefore) < 350) {
        MySpecialDialog("You have alerts turned off");
    }
}

window.nativeConfirm = window.confirm;
window.confirm = function (message) {
    var timeBefore = new Date();
    var confirmBool = nativeConfirm(message);
    var timeAfter = new Date();
    if ((timeAfter - timeBefore) < 350) {
        MySpecialDialog("You have confirms turned off");
    }
    return confirmBool;
}

Obviously I have set the time to 3.5 milliseconds. But after some testing we were only able to click or close the dialogs in about 5 milliseconds plus.

1
  • @locateganesh It works by kind of high jacking the native confirm and alert. The 350 is milliseconds, and it is checking how long the confirm/alert is open. If it is open for longer than that it is assumed that alerts/confirms are NOT blocked. The "MySpecialDialog" is a a dialog box you have created that doesn't use the browser's native alert/confirms. So if you have a bootstrap modal or some such thing it will open that and notify the user. Jan 29, 2018 at 15:57
7

I know everybody is ethically against this, but I understand there are reasons of practical joking where this is desired. I think Chrome took a solid stance on this by enforcing a mandatory one second separation time between alert messages. This gives the visitor just enough time to close the page or refresh if they're stuck on an annoying prank site.

So to answer your question, it's all a matter of timing. If you alert more than once per second, Chrome will create that checkbox. Here's a simple example of a workaround:

var countdown = 99;
function annoy(){
    if(countdown>0){
        alert(countdown+" bottles of beer on the wall, "+countdown+" bottles of beer! Take one down, pass it around, "+(countdown-1)+" bottles of beer on the wall!");
        countdown--;

        // Time must always be 1000 milliseconds, 999 or less causes the checkbox to appear
        setTimeout(function(){
            annoy();
        }, 1000);
    }
}

// Don't alert right away or Chrome will catch you
setTimeout(function(){
    annoy();
}, 1000);
3
  • Where did you find that it is a second or are you just guessing? May 14, 2014 at 16:26
  • 3
    It would appear that mozilla is using a 3 second span. bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=61098#c209 May 14, 2014 at 16:44
  • Thanks for the info, it's good to know FF is 3 seconds, I'd only tested this code in Chrome. I discovered Chrome's 1-second rule through some brief testing, you can test for yourself that any interval below 1000ms causes the checkbox to appear, so it's not just something I made up. They may very well change this in the future but for now it's exactly 1 second. May 14, 2014 at 20:48
3

You should better use jquery-confirm rather than trying to remove that checkbox.

$.confirm({
    title: 'Confirm!',
    content: 'Are you sure you want to refund invoice ?',
    confirm: function(){
       //do something 
    },
    cancel: function(){
       //do something
    }
}); 
-1

You should let the user do that if they want (and you can't stop them anyway).

Your problem is that you need to know that they have and then assume that they mean OK, not cancel. Replace confirm(x) with myConfirm(x):

function myConfirm(message) {
    var start = Number(new Date());
    var result = confirm(message);
    var end = Number(new Date());
    return (end<(start+10)||result==true);
}
1
-27
function alertWithoutNotice(message){
    setTimeout(function(){
        alert(message);
    }, 1000);
}
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  • 5
    Any rationale or idea why this might help, or any explanation, or at least a fiddle demonstrating it actually works? Feb 7, 2013 at 12:57
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    @DannyBeckett Honestly don't know why you marked this one as answered... There's no explanation and the code doesn't even work. The second alert gave me the option to prevent more dialogues.
    – sachleen
    Feb 13, 2013 at 7:00
  • 2
    This is wrong... because it doesn't work at all. What browser did you use?
    – NinjaBoy
    Mar 5, 2013 at 7:33
  • From memory, at the time, if you played with the timeout value (1000) for your machine, you could get Chrome to stop showing that checkbox. Mar 23, 2014 at 9:04
  • 1
    Here's a fiddle that shows that (for mysterious reasons) the function in the answer works: jsfiddle.net/em2hbavp Jul 23, 2017 at 9:43

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