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I am currently trying to create an extension that keeps track of the number of times a user visits certain websites. For example, if the user opens a tab and navigates to https://www.facebook.com/, chrome.storage updates to reflect this change (the integer value for the key https://www.facebook.com/ increases by 1).

Right now, I am using chrome.tabs.onUpdated to listen for URL changes and update chrome.storage accordingly. However, this listener also fires when a tab is closed (resulting in two updates of that website, one for visiting it and one for closing it).

I tried using chrome.tabs.onCreated, but I need to listen for changes within tabs (which this listener doesn't provide).

My question is, how can I update chrome.storage only when the user visits the website (and not when the user closes the tab with the website)?

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    can you differentiate between open and closed by looking at the event properties?
    – dandavis
    Jan 4, 2015 at 17:32
  • @dandavis Nope. The tab object or the listener doesn't tell you if the tab is being closed (developer.chrome.com/extensions/tabs#type-Tab, developer.chrome.com/extensions/tabs#event-onCreated).
    – srikarg
    Jan 4, 2015 at 17:34
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    looking at developer.chrome.com/extensions/tabs#type-Tab, it seems like active, status, and width would all vary based on open/close, but i can't test. also, if id doesn't change, then it's 2nd appearance implies a close.
    – dandavis
    Jan 4, 2015 at 17:43
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    I'm not seeing chrome.tabs.onUpdated firing when the tab is closed, can you post your JavaScript so I can try to re-create?
    – Alex
    Jan 4, 2015 at 19:00
  • @Alex Thanks for the help! I just realized a silly mistake I made. The problem was not in the listener. Please see my answer below.
    – srikarg
    Jan 4, 2015 at 19:20

1 Answer 1

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I just realized my mistake. Apparently, another function I made was calling the storage functionality of the extension, resulting in the duplicate entries.

For future reference, this is the code I used to check for the new URLs that the user visits:

chrome.tabs.onUpdated.addListener(function(tabId, changeInfo, tab) {
    if (changeInfo.status === 'complete') {
      console.log(tab.url);
    }
});
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    That's correct - I thought for a moment that your mistake might be that onUpdated is called twice - once for loading and once for complete but looks like you've got that covered!
    – Alex
    Jan 4, 2015 at 19:21

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