vote up 1 vote down star

I have

<span class="cssButton"><a href="javascript:void(0);" class="buttonBlue" onclick="swfu.startUpload();"> <img src="http://uber-upload.com/img/icons/up_16.png" alt=""/> Uber-Upload! </a></span>

And i want to make it so that if you press that button, it also sets a variable that makes it so that if you try to leave the page, it will pop up one of those "Are you sure you want to leave this page" alerts to prevent people from accidently leaving while there is an upload going on.

Dont worry about unsetting the variable after the upload finishes, i'll add that, i just need one of you smart coders to make me a framework.

Thanks!

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3 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

Add this declaration to the page:

var upcount = 0;

Change your onclick to:

onclick="++upcount; swfu.startUpload();"

If the swfu gives you some kind of event when it's done uploading, put this on it:

--upcount;

And add this handler:

window.onbeforeunload = function() {
    if (upcount > 0) {
        return "The upload is still in progress, leaving the page will cancel it.";
    }
}

Where browsers respect the onbeforeunload, that'll work. And most of them do, most of the time. Where they don't, well, you tried. Note that by using a counter, you're allowing for multiple uploads.

You might consider attachEvent (IE) or addEventListener (standard) (or a library like Prototype or jQuery that evens out the differences for you) for attaching your events rather than using attributes. Using attributes (aka DOM0 handlers) is fairly old-fashioned and a bit limiting (only one handler per event per element). But it does still work.

link|flag
thanks, cleaner than other guys code. – jiexi Aug 20 at 20:45
Cheers. I don't know about cleaner, the other was clean enough, but this does handle the one additional case (multiples). – T.J. Crowder Aug 20 at 20:48
vote up 1 vote down
function warnUser()
{
   if(dataIsDirty)
   {
      return "You have made changes. They will be lost if you continue.";
   }
   else
   {
      // Reset the flag to its default value.
      dataIsDirty = false;
   }
}

function isDirty()
{
   dataIsDirty = true;
}

function isClean()
{
    dataIsDirty = false;
}

Then you use it just like on the onbeforeunload event.

window.onbeforeunload = warnUser;
dataIsDirty = false; //Or true, depending on if you want it to show up even if they dont' make changes)

Then to use it, just use the 'isClean' function to anything you don't want to trigger it(Save, for instance), or you can attach 'isDirty' to any event you want to trigger it before they leave (say, editing a form field).

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1  
Um, why are you setting dataIsDirty false when it's already false? – T.J. Crowder Aug 20 at 20:28
for the most part this will work. Thanks – jiexi Aug 20 at 20:31
On the initial loading of the page, you don't want that flag to be set if they leave the page. You only want it to be set if they change something. So by default, it should be false. When they change something, it's set to true, and when they click 'save', it's reset to false. That's why. – George Stocker Aug 20 at 20:31
Your logic, translated into pseudocode, is if (flag is true) { do something } else { set flag false; }. That logic is flawed, you're setting the flag false when the flag is already false. – T.J. Crowder Aug 20 at 20:37
I should clarify: That's just a detail, on the whole the answer is fine, although it only allows for a single upload. – T.J. Crowder Aug 20 at 20:46
vote up 0 vote down

Relying on onbeforeunload is sketchy at best. Because spammers have abused the behavior in the same way you're suggesting the ability for people to do this has been basically removed.

You can now only respond to onbeforeunload if the close event was fired from activating a button or such.

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so theres no way to make the button set $uploading=true then put something like window.onbeforeunload = confirmExit; function confirmExit() { if ($uploading=true){ return "If you leave while uploading, your files will be lost. Are you sure you want to exit this page?"; }} Just something like that – jiexi Aug 20 at 20:27
Seems to work well enough for GMail, SO, ... – T.J. Crowder Aug 20 at 20:29
Your last statement is untrue; AFAIK (and I've tested this across IE6,7, and FF 2 and 3) onbeforeunload is fired any time you leave the page by any means. – George Stocker Aug 20 at 20:33
@Gortok, Admittedly I haven't tested this recently, but my understanding is that the zone has a lot to do with what is and isn't allowed. If you code something on computer, you're going to be in the Intranet zone and there are laxer permissions in that zone. – Orion Adrian Aug 21 at 13:22

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