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I'm trying to figure out how the unload event works. I'm using a $(window).unload() handler to send a list of several custom values to my analytics service when the user moves to another page. I make a separate API call to the service for each value.

I'm just wondering if I can rely on my handler running every time till it's finished, or if there'll be some occasions when the loading of the next page's JavaScript will interrupt it before it can register all the values in the list.

The jQuery documentation on .unload() says "It is not possible to cancel the unload event with .preventDefault()." To me this implies that after the browser starts executing your unload handler there's no way to hold it back from loading, parsing and executing the JS of the new page.

But the MDN page on the window.onunload event says "The resources removal is processed after the unload event occurs."

So does this mean the browser runs a page's unload function till it's finished, and only then scraps it to load the next page's JS?

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    Most of the time when I see people using the unload event, they really wanted to use the beforeunload event. Testing with window.onunload = function () {for (var i = 0; i < 1000; ++i) console.log(i);} shows the loop completes, however things like alert will not work.
    – Paul S.
    Feb 24, 2014 at 11:54
  • Just a few paragraphs above your quote from jQuery.com, there's this: The exact handling of the unload event has varied from version to version of browsers. For example, some versions of Firefox trigger the event when a link is followed, but not when the window is closed. In practical usage, **behavior should be tested on all supported browsers, and contrasted with the proprietary beforeunload event**. So, you're probably gonna wanna take a try with beforeunload. Feb 24, 2014 at 12:35
  • Thanks Paul and victoriantunes, that may be the way to go - the MDN page has this interesting reference to the spec whatwg.org/specs/web-apps/current-work/#unload-a-document, but it's hard to work out from that whether you can rely on a handler running to the end. Feb 24, 2014 at 13:28

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MDN seems to have multiple versions in their site. Here's another one about unload which describes the state of the document during unload.

unload

The unload event is fired when the document or a child resource is being unloaded.

It is fired after:

  • beforeunload (cancellable event)
  • pagehide

The document is in a particular state:

  • all the resources still exist (img, iframe etc.)
  • nothing is visible anymore to the end user
  • UI interactions are ineffective (window.open, alert, confirm etc.)
  • an error won't stop the unloading workflow

As far as I know, async requests (ajax) could possibly be fired but not guaranteed that they will arrive on the server or even get off the browser.


In the context with one of your tags (analytics), it seems like you are trying to know when the user leaves the page.

  • Why not do a heartbeat/regular ping to the server? The last known ping could be used as an estimate of when the user was last seen on that page.

  • Or store the time the user left the page inside a cookie, like some sort of "pending report". This can be executed inside unload. The next time your script meets the cookie, have it parsed for the pending data and send it to the server.

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  • Thanks Joseph - I'm hoping somebody knows a definitive answer to this question. Feb 24, 2014 at 20:41
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    It seems nobody can tell us for sure if processes triggered on unload are pretty much sure to complete. My colleague referred me to the same page as Joseph. He believes ajax requests triggered on unload are pretty reliable - he notes that before we sent our analytics on unload we were having some issues with our data, but after we started doing this our reports seemed to be consistently correct. Mar 27, 2014 at 12:16

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