Reputation: 413
Using @HostListener hook, but confirm dialog (that asks: Do you want to Leave this page? ...or Do you want to Reload this page?) is not showing.
The code works, but the confirm dialog is not showing.
Here what I have:
@HostListener('window:beforeunload', ['$event'])
public doSomething($event) {
console.log("do I see this?") // <---- this logs to the console.
return "something else";
}
But I don't see this:
Upvotes: 18
Views: 40531
Reputation: 413
returning false
instead of the string "something else"
fixes the problem and the confirm dialog is shown.
It's quite possible that Angular bindings modify the return value
Upvotes: 19
Reputation: 859
Be aware that beforeunload and unload event listeners both have side effects in case you are planning to use bfcache (back/forward cache) in your Angular application. So use with caution. Read here: https://web.dev/bfcache/#only-add-beforeunload-listeners-conditionally
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 101
For anybody still looking for another way to handle this in Angular. You can try doing this:
<router-outlet (window:beforeunload)="doBeforeUnload()" (window:unload)="doUnload()"></router-outlet>
Here I added the events to an event router-outlet bucause its the only thing in my app.component.html but you can add it to a container or wrapper. Also added both events because one beforeunload
will only show the alert to the user when returning false and then unload
handles the actual closing event. This is important because you may want to know what to do when the user continues or actually decides to close or handling unwanted clicks. The actual functions look like this:
doBeforeUnload() {
// Alert the user window is closing
return false;
}
doUnload() {
// Clear session or do something
this.auth.getLogout();
}
PD: I tested this in Angular 6.
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 81
Instead of returning false
you need to return $event.returnValue = "your text"
Modern browsers does not show your entered text.
@HostListener('window:beforeunload', ['$event'])
yourfunction($event) {
return $event.returnValue='Your changes will not be saved';
}
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 16448
You need to return this
return $event.returnValue = "something";
However, in modern browsers, the message you set will not show. The browsers will simply show their browser defaults
Upvotes: 1