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I'm running a dialog box upon user leaving the page. The only thing is it runs for 1 sec and disappears? I know it has to do with bind('beforeunload'), but the dialog dies sooner than you can read it.

How do I stop this from happening?

$(document).ready(function() {  

    // Append dialog pop-up modem to body of page
    $('body').append("<div id='confirmDialog' title='Confirm'><p><span class='ui-icon ui-icon-alert' style='float:left; margin:0 7px 20px 0;'></span>Are you sure you want to leave " + brandName + "? <br /> Your order will not be saved.</p></div>");

    // Create Dialog box
    $('#confirmDialog').dialog({
      autoOpen: false,
      modal: true,
      overlay: {
        backgroundColor: '#000',
        opacity: 0.5
      },
      buttons: {
        'I am sure': function() {
          var href = $(this).dialog('option', 'href', this.href);
          window.location.href = href;
        },
        'Complete my order': function() {
          $(this).dialog('close');
        }
      }
    });

    // Bind event to Before user leaves page with function parameter e
    $(window).bind('beforeunload', function(e) {    
        // Mozilla takes the
        var e = $('#confirmDialog').dialog('open').dialog('option', 'href', this.href);
        // For IE and Firefox prior to version 4
        if (e){
            $('#confirmDialog').dialog('open').dialog('option', 'href', this.href);
        }
        // For Safari
        e.$('#confirmDialog').dialog('open').dialog('option', 'href', this.href);
    }); 

    // unbind function if user clicks a link
    $('a').click(function(event) {
        $(window).unbind();
        //event.preventDefault();
        //$('#confirmDialog').dialog('option', 'href', this.href).dialog('open');
    });

    // unbind function if user submits a form
    $('form').submit(function() {
        $(window).unbind();
    });
});
share|improve this question
you need to return false otherwise, the event continues to the unload and consequently will close the window... – balexandre May 19 '11 at 19:22
with return false, the most browsers open a Default Dialog: "stay" or "leave" – ben dotnet May 19 '11 at 19:31
2  
@balexandre: returning false from beforeunload will just make an alert box with "false" on it. – Rocket Hazmat May 19 '11 at 21:38
When copying an example, try to understand it before editing it. e.$('#confirmDialog') doesn't make any sense. – Rocket Hazmat Feb 23 '12 at 6:02

1 Answer

up vote 83 down vote accepted

beforeunload utilizes a method built in to the browser, you need to return a string to it, and the browser will display the string and ask the user if they want to leave the page.

You cannot use your own dialog boxes (or jQueryUI modal dialogs) to override beforeunload.

beforeunload cannot redirect the user to another page.

$(window).on('beforeunload', function(){
  return 'Are you sure you want to leave?';
});

This will make an alert box pop up that says 'Are you sure you want to leave?' and asks the user if they wanna leave the page.

(UPDATE: Firefox doesn't display your custom message, it only displays its own.)

If you want to run a function as the page is unloading, you can use $(window).unload(), just note that it can't stop the page from unloading or redirect the user. (UPDATE: Chrome and Firefox block alerts in unload.)

$(window).unload(function(){
  alert('Bye.');
});

Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/3kvAC/241/

UPDATE:

$(...).unload(...) is deprecated since jQuery v1.8, instead use:

$(window).on('unload', function(){
});
share|improve this answer
1  
it seems like Firefox is now blocking the alert() too – alumi Jan 8 at 16:05
@alumi: I guess browsers don't like it when you add an alert so the browser can't leave the page. That was just an example to show the event works ^^ – Rocket Hazmat Jan 8 at 16:09

protected by Rocket Hazmat May 13 at 16:15

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