74

I want to write Jquery code in master file, so that if there if user changes page and there is any unsaved changes user should get alert. I got one answer from this: link

However in most solution I will have to write code on all pages. I want it to write only at one place so that everybody dont have to worry to write it in their modules. My code is like:

<script type="text/javascript">
    var isChange;
    $(document).ready(function () {
        $("input[type='text']").change(function () {
            isChange = true;
        })
    });
    $(window).unload(function () {
        if (isChange) {
            alert('Handler for .unload() called.');
        }
    });

</script>

But everytime i make changes in text boxes .change() event is not firing.

What can be wrong in the code?

EDIT: I changed .change() to .click and it is fired. i am using jquery 1.4.1..is it because of jquery version that change() is not working?

4
  • are all input fields static or some are added dynamically to the form (or loaded by ajax)?
    – Tomer
    Aug 7, 2012 at 10:50
  • 4
    However in most solution I will have to write code on all pages. Why not using an external script file?
    – Ram
    Aug 7, 2012 at 10:52
  • @Raminson is right, write an external js file and just include it in the pages.
    – Tomer
    Aug 7, 2012 at 10:54
  • 1
    non jquery version: stackoverflow.com/questions/7317273/… May 14, 2016 at 13:09

8 Answers 8

131

This is what i am using, Put all this code in a separate JS file and load it in your header file so you will not need to copy this again and again:

var unsaved = false;

$(":input").change(function(){ //triggers change in all input fields including text type
    unsaved = true;
});
        
function unloadPage(){ 
    if(unsaved){
        return "You have unsaved changes on this page. Do you want to leave this page and discard your changes or stay on this page?";
    }
}
        
window.onbeforeunload = unloadPage;

EDIT for $ not found:

This error can only be caused by one of three things:

  1. Your JavaScript file is not being properly loaded into your page
  2. You have a botched version of jQuery. This could happen because someone edited the core file, or a plugin may have overwritten the $ variable.
  3. You have JavaScript running before the page is fully loaded, and as such, before jQuery is fully loaded.

Make sure all JS code is being placed in this:

$(document).ready(function () {
  //place above code here
});

Edit for a Save/Send/Submit Button Exception

$('#save').click(function() {
    unsaved = false;
});

Edit to work with dynamic inputs

// Another way to bind the event
$(window).bind('beforeunload', function() {
    if(unsaved){
        return "You have unsaved changes on this page. Do you want to leave this page and discard your changes or stay on this page?";
    }
});

// Monitor dynamic inputs
$(document).on('change', ':input', function(){ //triggers change in all input fields including text type
    unsaved = true;
});

Add the above code in your alert_unsaved_changes.js file.

13
  • can you try to add alert('asd'); before unsaved = true; and then alert(unsaved); so you will come to know what unsaved holds when data is changed.
    – talha2k
    Aug 7, 2012 at 11:08
  • Yes it do, its just a javascript. Have you included jquery??
    – talha2k
    Aug 7, 2012 at 11:24
  • yup..i have included jquery...i just checked in firebug.. and i got error as "$ not defined"..However i have given reference like <script type="text/javascript" src="Scripts/jquery-1.4.1-vsdoc.js"></script> in master page and other pages as well Aug 7, 2012 at 11:30
  • 1
    Is there a way to have this NOT run if you click a 'save' button Apr 18, 2013 at 20:40
  • 1
    This is great. Works perfectly but can you tell me why it doesn't work on iPhone? is there a different function we have to use?
    – stueynet
    May 16, 2014 at 16:30
23

A version that use serialization of the form :

Execute this code, when dom ready :

// Store form state at page load
var initial_form_state = $('#myform').serialize();

// Store form state after form submit
$('#myform').submit(function(){
  initial_form_state = $('#myform').serialize();
});

// Check form changes before leaving the page and warn user if needed
$(window).bind('beforeunload', function(e) {
  var form_state = $('#myform').serialize();
  if(initial_form_state != form_state){
    var message = "You have unsaved changes on this page. Do you want to leave this page and discard your changes or stay on this page?";
    e.returnValue = message; // Cross-browser compatibility (src: MDN)
    return message;
  }
});

If the user change a field then manually rollback, no warn is displayed

2
  • 5
    This is the one that works with more complex custom user controls. Took this approach myself as well :) May 31, 2016 at 12:11
  • 1
    It's a better approach as you don"t have to deal with the case user want to discard changes. 👏
    – gramgram
    Jan 18, 2022 at 9:45
2

change event is fired once the user blurs from input not on every single character inputed.

If you need it to be called every time something is changed (even if focus is still in that input field) you would have to rely on combination of keyup and bunch of events to keep track of pasting/cuting using mouse only.

P.S. I hope you're aware that your approach to detecting changes isn't the best one? If user input some text, leaves the field and then reverts the changes the script would still alert him about modified text.

2

you should register events for not only inputs but also textareas, if you mean textarea with text box. You can use keyup for isChange, so that you don't wait for user to blur from this area.

$("input[type='text'], textarea").keyup(function () {
    isChange = true;
})
2

This is really just a different version of @AlphaMale's answer but improved in a few ways:

# Message displayed to user. Depending on browser and if it is a turbolink,
# regular link or user-driven navigation this may or may not display.
msg = "This page is asking you to confirm that you want to leave - data you have entered may not be saved."

# Default state
unsaved = false

# Mark the page as having unsaved content
$(document).on 'change', 'form[method=post]:not([data-remote]) :input', -> unsaved = true

# A new page was loaded via Turbolinks, reset state
$(document).on 'page:change', -> setTimeout (-> unsaved = false), 10

# The user submitted the form (to save) so no need to ask them.
$(document).on 'submit', 'form[method=post]', ->
  unsaved = false
  return

# Confirm with user if they try to go elsewhere
$(window).bind 'beforeunload', -> return msg if unsaved

# If page about to change via Turbolinks also confirm with user
$(document).on 'page:before-change', (event) ->
  event.preventDefault() if unsaved && !confirm msg

This is better in the following ways:

  • It is coffeescript which IMHO automatically makes it better. :)
  • It is entirely based on event bubbling so dynamic content is automatically handled (@AlphaMale's update also has this).
  • It only operates on POST forms as GET forms do not have data we typically want to avoid loosing (i.e. GET forms tend to be search boxes and filtering criteria).
  • It doesn't need to be bound to a specific button for carrying out the save. Anytime the form is submitted we assume that submission is saving.
  • It is Turbolinks compatible. If you don't need that just drop the two page: event bindings.
  • It is designed so that you can just include it with the rest of your JS and your entire site will be protected.
0
1

Why not simply bind the event to the change callback?

$(":input").change(function()
{
    $(window).unbind('unload').bind('unload',function()
    {
        alert('unsaved changes on the page');
    });
});

As an added bonus, you can use confirm and select the last element that triggered the change event:

$(":input").change(function()
{
    $(window).unbind('unload').bind('unload',(function(elem)
    {//elem holds reference to changed element
        return function(e)
        {//get the event object:
            e = e || window.event;
            if (confirm('unsaved changes on the page\nDo you wish to save them first?'))
            {
                elem.focus();//select element
                return false;//in jQuery this stops the event from completeing
            }
        }
    }($(this)));//passed elem here, I passed it as a jQ object, so elem.focus() works
    //pass it as <this>, then you'll have to do $(elem).focus(); or write pure JS
});

If you have some save button, make sure that that unbinds the unload event, though:

$('#save').click(function()
{
    $(window).unbind('unload');
    //rest of your code here
});
1

Without jQuery:

var unsaved = false;

document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", function() { 

    var els = document.querySelectorAll('textarea, input, select');
    els.forEach( function(el) {
        el.addEventListener('change', function() {
            unsaved = true;
        });
    });  
        
    window.addEventListener('beforeunload', function(event) {
        if(unsaved){
            event.returnValue = "string";
        }
    });

    var forms = document.querySelectorAll('form');
    forms.forEach( function(form) {
        form.addEventListener('submit', function() {
            unsaved = false;
        });
    });  

});

The weird 'string' hack explanation can be found here.

0

I use $('form').change etc. function to set a dirty bit variable. Not suitable to catch all changes (as per previous answers), but catches all that I'm interested in, in my app.

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