I have a focus handler on a textfield:
$("#input").on("focus", (e) => {
// do some stuff
});
When I right-click, however, I don't want that focus handler to be executed, so I did:
$("#input").on("mousedown", (e) => {
if (e.button === 2) { // right click
e.preventDefault();
}
});
However, that also prevents the textfield from ever getting focus when I right-click. I still want it to get focus, I just don't want the handler to execute, so I triggered the handler manually:
$("#input").on("mousedown", (e) => {
if (e.button === 2) { // right click
e.preventDefault();
$("#input").trigger("focus", true);
}
});
$("input").on("focus", (e, someParam) => {
if (someParam) return;
// do some stuff
});
This way, the textfield gets focus, but we immediately return out of the handler.
The problem I noticed is that the first time I trigger the focus handler, someParam is undefined and we end up executing do some stuff. For all subsequent right-clicks, someParam is true.
I commented out the line that triggers the focus handler, and indeed, the focus handler is never executed, because we call preventDefault, so it seems that the first execution of the handler necessarily comes from $("#input").trigger("focus", true);. So why then is someParam undefined if I'm passing in true as the extra parameter?
JsFiddle. Tested in Chrome.
This appears to be a current issue with jQuery. See this github issue.
As a workaround, try the following:
var a = $("#a");
var _focusData = null;
var focusEvent = (e) => {
if (_focusData) {
_focusData = null;
return;
}
_focusData = null;
var t = $("textarea").first();
t.val(t.val() + "\nfocus");
};
a.on("mousedown", (e) => {
if (e.button === 2) {
e.preventDefault();
var t = $("textarea").first();
t.val(t.val() + "\n" + e.button);
_focusData = true;
a.trigger("focus");
}
});
a.on("focus", focusEvent);
After doing a lot more research, including trying to trigger custom events with $.Event, it seems like your best course of action is to either use stack traces, pollute the global scope, or downgrade your jQuery version.
I found another solution besides the comment from CBroe (to just perform the logic in an else statement):
Use a named function as our mouse down handler, then examine the stack trace.
var a = $("#a");
a.on("mousedown", onMouseDown);
function onMouseDown(e) {
if (e.button === 2) {
e.preventDefault();
e.stopImmediatePropagation()
var t = $("textarea").first();
t.val(t.val() + "\n" + e.button);
a.trigger("focus", true);
}
}
a.on("focus", (e, someParam) => {
var stackTrace = getStackTrace();
if(stackTrace.indexOf("onMouseDown") >= 0) return;
var t = $("textarea").first();
t.val(t.val() + "\nfocus");
console.log(someParam);
console.trace();
});
var getStackTrace = function() {
var obj = {};
if(Error.captureStackTrace) { //Chrome (IE/Edge? Didn't test)
Error.captureStackTrace(obj, getStackTrace);
}
else { //Firefox
obj = Error();
}
return obj.stack;
};
https://jsfiddle.net/bjj56eua/4/
As I was typing this up, FrankerZ posted an answer which looks much nicer. I suggest doing that. This was a dirty hack involving string parsing, but it works. It just isn't a good idea.
I need to call function:
Every second when key is hold (e.g. for five seconds of holding it should fire 5 times every second).
When user releases key (keyup) and if less then one second passed.
Events should be binded on document, not on text input.
If second statement "kinda" works, with first I have problems as keypress event isn't working on some browsers and keydown fires event all the time.
var interval;
$(document).on('keypress', function(e) {
console.log('keypress');
interval = setInterval(function() {
doSomething(e.keyCode);
}, 1000);
}).on('keyup', function(e) {
console.log('keyup');
if(interval === 0) {
doSomething(e.keyCode);
}
clearInterval(interval);
interval = 0;
});
function doSomething(keyCode) {
console.log(keyCode);
}
jsFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/kWFUA/
Thank you for help!
I've updated the fiddle http://jsfiddle.net/kWFUA/3/
var interval;
var called = false;
$(document).on('keydown', function(e) {
if(interval == null) {
console.log('keydown');
called = false;
interval = setInterval(function() {
doSomething(e.keyCode);
called = true;
}, 1000);
}
}).on('keyup', function(e) {
console.log('keyup');
clearInterval(interval);
interval = null;
if(!called)
doSomething(e.keyCode);
});
function doSomething(keyCode) {
console.log(keyCode);
}
I'm trying to generate html on the fly with javascript. I'm binding on the click of buttons on my page. There are multiple buttons on my page which are causing my elements to be bound multiple times which produces the desired results to appear in the amount of times the button has been clicked.
My question is there something that can check if a element is already bound in jquery? If so, how do I incorporate that with the .live() function in jquery.
Here is my code:
$(document).ready(
function () {
$(':button').live("click", ".textbox, :button", function () {
alert("binding");
$(".textbox").click(function () {
defaultVal = this.defaultValue;
if (this.defaultValue) {
this.value = "";
}
});
$(".textbox").blur(function () {
if (this.value == "") {
this.value = defaultVal;
}
});
$('[name="numsets"]').blur(function () {
if (!parseInt(this.value)) {
$(this).val("you need to enter a number");
}
});
$('[name="weightrepbutton"]').click(function () {
var $numsets = $(this).parent().children('[name="numsets"]');
if ($numsets.val() != "you need to enter a number" && $numsets.val() != "Number of Sets") {
var numbersets = parseInt($numsets.val())
repandweight.call(this, numbersets)
$(this).hide();
$numsets.hide();
}
})
});
});
The problem is line 4, every time a button is clicked, all functions that were previous bound seem to be bound to the same function twice, which is a problem.
Thanks for the help!
You are doing it twice ! One inside another. Take out the outer binding and it should work
$(document).ready(function () {
$(document).on("click",".textbox",function () {
defaultVal = this.defaultValue;
if (this.defaultValue) {
this.value = "";
}
});
$(document).on("blur",".textbox",function () {
var item=$(this);
if (item.val() == "") {
item.val(defaultVal);
}
});
$(document).on("blur","input[name='numsets']",function () {
var item=$(this);
if (!parseInt(item.val())) {
item.val("you need to enter a number");
}
});
$(document).on("click","input[name='weightrepbutton']",function () {
var $numsets = $(this).parent().children('[name="numsets"]');
if ($numsets.val() != "you need to enter a number" && $numsets.val() != "Number of Sets") {
var numbersets = parseInt($numsets.val())
repandweight.call(this, numbersets)
$(this).hide();
$numsets.hide();
}
})
});
if you are using jQuery 1.7+ version, consider switching to jQuery on instead of live.
EDIT: Updated live to on as OP mentioned it in the comment.
I have created a form with malsup's Form Plugin wherein it submits on change of the inputs. I have set up my jQuery script to index drop down menus and visible inputs, and uses that index to determine whether keydown of tab should move focus to the next element or the first element, and likewise with shift+tab keydown. However, instead of moving focus to the first element from the last element on tab keydown like I would like it to, it moves focus to the second element. How can I change it to cycle focus to the actual first and last elements? Here is a live link to my form: http://www.presspound.org/calculator/ajax/sample.php. Thanks to anyone that tries to help. Here is my script:
$(document).ready(function() {
var options = {
target: '#c_main',
success: setFocus
};
$('#calculator').live('submit', function() {
$(this).ajaxSubmit(options);
return false;
});
$(this).focusin(function(event) {
var shiftDown = false;
$('input, select').each(function (i) {
$(this).data('initial', $(this).val());
});
$('input, select').keyup(function(event) {
if (event.keyCode==16) {
shiftDown = false;
$('#shiftCatch').val(shiftDown);
}
});
$('input, select').keydown(function(event) {
if (event.keyCode==16) {
shiftDown = true;
$('#shiftCatch').val(shiftDown);
}
if (event.keyCode==13) {
$('#captured').val(event.target.id);
} else if (event.keyCode==9 && shiftDown==false) {
return $(event.target).each(function() {
var fields = $(this).parents('form:eq(0),calculator').find('select, input:visible');
var index = fields.index(this);
var nextEl = fields.eq(index+1).attr('id');
var firstEl = fields.eq(0).attr('id');
var focusEl = '#'+firstEl;
if (index>-1 && (index+1)<fields.length) {
$('#captured').val(nextEl);
} else if(index+1>=fields.length) {
if ($(this).val() != $(this).data('initial')) {
$('#captured').val(firstEl);
} else {
event.preventDefault();
$(focusEl).focus();
}
}
return false;
});
} else if (event.keyCode==9 && shiftDown==true) {
return $(event.target).each(function() {
var fields = $(this).parents('form:eq(0),calculator').find('select, input:visible');
var index = fields.index(this);
var prevEl = fields.eq(index-1).attr('id');
var lastEl = fields.eq(fields.length-1).attr('id');
var focusEl = '#'+lastEl;
if (index<fields.length && (index-1)>-1) {
$('#captured').val(prevEl);
} else if (index==0) {
if ($(this).val() != $(this).data('initial')) {
$('#captured').val(lastEl);
} else {
event.preventDefault();
$(focusEl).select();
}
}
return false;
});
}
});
});
});
function setFocus() {
with (document.calculator)
var recap = document.getElementById(recaptured.value);
if (recap!=null) {
setTimeout(function() {
if (recap.getAttribute('type')=='text') {
recap.select();
} else {
recap.focus();
}
}, 100 );
}
}
Edit #1: I made a few minor changes to the code, which has brought me a little closer to my intended functionality of the script. However, I only made one change to the code pertaining to the focus: I tried to to disable the tab keydown when pressed on the last element (and also the shift+tab keydown on the first element) in an attempt to force the focus on the element I want without skipping over it like it has been doing. This is the code I added:
$(this).one('keydown', function (event) {
return !(event.keyCode==9 && shiftDown==true);
});
This kind of works. After the page loads, If the user presses tab on the last element without making a change to its value, the focus will be set to the second element. However, the second time the user presses tab on the last element without making a change to its value, and every subsequent time thereafter, the focus will be set to the first element, just as I would like it to.
Edit #2: I replaced the code in Edit #1, with code utilizing event.preventDefault(), which works better. While if a user does a shift+tab keydown when in the first element, the focus moves to the last element as it should. However, if the user continues to hold down the shift key and presses tab again, focus will be set back to the first element. And if the user continues to hold the shift key down still yet and hits tab, the focus will move back to the last element. The focus will shift back and forth between the first and last element until the user lifts the shift key. This problem does not occur when only pressing tab. Here is the new code snippet:
event.preventDefault();
$(focusEl).focus();
You have a lot of code I didn't get full overview over, so I don't know if I missed some functionality you wanted integrated, but for the tabbing/shift-tabbing through form elements, this should do the work:
var elements = $("#container :input:visible");
var n = elements.length;
elements
.keydown(function(event){
if (event.keyCode == 9) { //if tab
var currentIndex = elements.index(this);
var newIndex = event.shiftKey ? (currentIndex - 1) % n : (currentIndex + 1) % n;
var el = elements.eq(newIndex);
if (el.attr("type") == "text")
elements.eq(newIndex).select();
else
elements.eq(newIndex).focus();
event.preventDefault();
}
});
elements will be the jQuery object containing all the input fields, in my example it's all the input fields inside the div #container
Here's a demo: http://jsfiddle.net/rA3L9/
Here is the solution, which I couldn't have reached it without Simen's help. Thanks again, Simen.
$(document).ready(function() {
var options = {
target: '#c_main',
success: setFocus
};
$('#calculator').live('submit', function() {
$(this).ajaxSubmit(options);
return false;
});
$(this).focusin(function(event) {
$('#calculator :input:visible').each(function (i) {
$(this).data('initial', $(this).val());
});
return $(event.target).each(function() {
$('#c_main :input:visible').live(($.browser.opera ? 'keypress' : 'keydown'), function(event){
var elements = $("#calculator :input:visible");
var n = elements.length;
var currentIndex = elements.index(this);
if (event.keyCode == 13) { //if enter
var focusElement = elements.eq(currentIndex).attr('id');
$('#captured').val(focusElement);
} else if (event.keyCode == 9) { //if tab
var newIndex = event.shiftKey ? (currentIndex - 1) % n : (currentIndex + 1) % n;
var el = elements.eq(newIndex);
var focusElement = el.attr('id');
if ($(this).val() != $(this).data('initial')) {
$('#captured').val(focusElement);
} else if ((currentIndex==0 && event.shiftKey) || (currentIndex==n-1 && !event.shiftKey)) {
event.preventDefault();
if (el.attr('type')=='text') {
$.browser.msie ? "" : $(window).scrollTop(5000);
el.select().delay(800);
} else {
$.browser.msie ? "" : $(window).scrollTop(-5000);
el.focus().delay(800);
}
} else if (el.is('select')) {
event.preventDefault();
if (el.attr('type')=='text') {
el.select();
} else {
el.focus();
}
}
}
});
});
});
});
function setFocus() {
with (document.calculator)
var recap = document.getElementById(recaptured.value);
if (recap!=null) {
setTimeout(function() {
if (recap.getAttribute('type')=='text') {
recap.select();
} else {
recap.focus();
}
}, 1 );
}
}
I put my files available to download in my live link: http://www.presspound.org/calculator/ajax/sample.php
I have a requirement to implement an "Unsaved Changes" prompt in an ASP .Net application. If a user modifies controls on a web form, and attempts to navigate away before saving, a prompt should appear warning them that they have unsaved changes, and give them the option to cancel and stay on the current page. The prompt should not display if the user hasn't touched any of the controls.
Ideally I'd like to implement this in JavaScript, but before I go down the path of rolling my own code, are there any existing frameworks or recommended design patterns for achieving this? Ideally I'd like something that can easily be reused across multiple pages with minimal changes.
Using jQuery:
var _isDirty = false;
$("input[type='text']").change(function(){
_isDirty = true;
});
// replicate for other input types and selects
Combine with onunload/onbeforeunload methods as required.
From the comments, the following references all input fields, without duplicating code:
$(':input').change(function () {
Using $(":input") refers to all input, textarea, select, and button elements.
One piece of the puzzle:
/**
* Determines if a form is dirty by comparing the current value of each element
* with its default value.
*
* #param {Form} form the form to be checked.
* #return {Boolean} <code>true</code> if the form is dirty, <code>false</code>
* otherwise.
*/
function formIsDirty(form) {
for (var i = 0; i < form.elements.length; i++) {
var element = form.elements[i];
var type = element.type;
if (type == "checkbox" || type == "radio") {
if (element.checked != element.defaultChecked) {
return true;
}
}
else if (type == "hidden" || type == "password" ||
type == "text" || type == "textarea") {
if (element.value != element.defaultValue) {
return true;
}
}
else if (type == "select-one" || type == "select-multiple") {
for (var j = 0; j < element.options.length; j++) {
if (element.options[j].selected !=
element.options[j].defaultSelected) {
return true;
}
}
}
}
return false;
}
And another:
window.onbeforeunload = function(e) {
e = e || window.event;
if (formIsDirty(document.forms["someForm"])) {
// For IE and Firefox
if (e) {
e.returnValue = "You have unsaved changes.";
}
// For Safari
return "You have unsaved changes.";
}
};
Wrap it all up, and what do you get?
var confirmExitIfModified = (function() {
function formIsDirty(form) {
// ...as above
}
return function(form, message) {
window.onbeforeunload = function(e) {
e = e || window.event;
if (formIsDirty(document.forms[form])) {
// For IE and Firefox
if (e) {
e.returnValue = message;
}
// For Safari
return message;
}
};
};
})();
confirmExitIfModified("someForm", "You have unsaved changes.");
You'll probably also want to change the registration of the beforeunload event handler to use LIBRARY_OF_CHOICE's event registration.
In the .aspx page, you need a Javascript function to tell whether or not the form info is "dirty"
<script language="javascript">
var isDirty = false;
function setDirty() {
isDirty = true;
}
function checkSave() {
var sSave;
if (isDirty == true) {
sSave = window.confirm("You have some changes that have not been saved. Click OK to save now or CANCEL to continue without saving.");
if (sSave == true) {
document.getElementById('__EVENTTARGET').value = 'btnSubmit';
document.getElementById('__EVENTARGUMENT').value = 'Click';
window.document.formName.submit();
} else {
return true;
}
}
}
</script>
<body class="StandardBody" onunload="checkSave()">
and in the codebehind, add the triggers to the input fields as well as resets on the submission/cancel buttons....
btnSubmit.Attributes.Add("onclick", "isDirty = 0;");
btnCancel.Attributes.Add("onclick", "isDirty = 0;");
txtName.Attributes.Add("onchange", "setDirty();");
txtAddress.Attributes.Add("onchange", "setDirty();");
//etc..
The following uses the browser's onbeforeunload function and jquery to capture any onchange event. IT also looks for any submit or reset buttons to reset the flag indicating changes have occurred.
dataChanged = 0; // global variable flags unsaved changes
function bindForChange(){
$('input,checkbox,textarea,radio,select').bind('change',function(event) { dataChanged = 1})
$(':reset,:submit').bind('click',function(event) { dataChanged = 0 })
}
function askConfirm(){
if (dataChanged){
return "You have some unsaved changes. Press OK to continue without saving."
}
}
window.onbeforeunload = askConfirm;
window.onload = bindForChange;
Thanks for the replies everyone. I ended up implementing a solution using JQuery and the Protect-Data plug-in. This allows me to automatically apply monitoring to all controls on a page.
There are a few caveats however, especially when dealing with an ASP .Net application:
When a user chooses the cancel option, the doPostBack function will throw a JavaScript error. I had to manually put a try-catch around the .submit call within doPostBack to suppress it.
On some pages, a user could perform an action that performs a postback to the same page, but isn't a save. This results in any JavaScript logic resetting, so it thinks nothing has changed after the postback when something may have. I had to implement a hidden textbox that gets posted back with the page, and is used to hold a simple boolean value indicating whether the data is dirty. This gets persisted across postbacks.
You may want some postbacks on the page to not trigger the dialog, such as a Save button. In this case, you can use JQuery to add an OnClick function which sets window.onbeforeunload to null.
Hopefully this is helpful for anyone else who has to implement something similar.
General Solution Supporting multiple forms in a given page (Just copy and paste in your project)
$(document).ready(function() {
$('form :input').change(function() {
$(this).closest('form').addClass('form-dirty');
});
$(window).bind('beforeunload', function() {
if($('form:not(.ignore-changes).form-dirty').length > 0) {
return 'You have unsaved changes, are you sure you want to discard them?';
}
});
$('form').bind('submit',function() {
$(this).closest('form').removeClass('form-dirty');
return true;
});
});
Note: This solution is combined from others' solutions to create a general integrated solution.
Features:
Just copy and paste into your app.
Supports Multiple Forms.
You can style or make actions dirty forms, since they've the class "form-dirty".
You can exclude some forms by adding the class 'ignore-changes'.
The following solution works for prototype (tested in FF, IE 6 and Safari). It uses a generic form observer (which fires form:changed when any fields of the form have been modified), which you can use for other stuff as well.
/* use this function to announce changes from your own scripts/event handlers.
* Example: onClick="makeDirty($(this).up('form'));"
*/
function makeDirty(form) {
form.fire("form:changed");
}
function handleChange(form, event) {
makeDirty(form);
}
/* generic form observer, ensure that form:changed is being fired whenever
* a field is being changed in that particular for
*/
function setupFormChangeObserver(form) {
var handler = handleChange.curry(form);
form.getElements().each(function (element) {
element.observe("change", handler);
});
}
/* installs a form protector to a form marked with class 'protectForm' */
function setupProtectForm() {
var form = $$("form.protectForm").first();
/* abort if no form */
if (!form) return;
setupFormChangeObserver(form);
var dirty = false;
form.observe("form:changed", function(event) {
dirty = true;
});
/* submitting the form makes the form clean again */
form.observe("submit", function(event) {
dirty = false;
});
/* unfortunatly a propper event handler doesn't appear to work with IE and Safari */
window.onbeforeunload = function(event) {
if (dirty) {
return "There are unsaved changes, they will be lost if you leave now.";
}
};
}
document.observe("dom:loaded", setupProtectForm);
Here's a javascript / jquery solution that is simple. It accounts for "undos" by the user, it is encapsulated within a function for ease of application, and it doesn't misfire on submit. Just call the function and pass the ID of your form.
This function serializes the form once when the page is loaded, and again before the user leaves the page. If the two form states are different, the prompt is shown.
Try it out: http://jsfiddle.net/skibulk/Ydt7Y/
function formUnloadPrompt(formSelector) {
var formA = $(formSelector).serialize(), formB, formSubmit = false;
// Detect Form Submit
$(formSelector).submit( function(){
formSubmit = true;
});
// Handle Form Unload
window.onbeforeunload = function(){
if (formSubmit) return;
formB = $(formSelector).serialize();
if (formA != formB) return "Your changes have not been saved.";
};
}
$(function(){
formUnloadPrompt('form');
});
I recently contributed to an open source jQuery plugin called dirtyForms.
The plugin is designed to work with dynamically added HTML, supports multiple forms, can support virtually any dialog framework, falls back to the browser beforeunload dialog, has a pluggable helper framework to support getting dirty status from custom editors (a tinyMCE plugin is included), works within iFrames, and the dirty status can be set or reset at will.
https://github.com/snikch/jquery.dirtyforms
Detect form changes with using jQuery is very simple:
var formInitVal = $('#formId').serialize(); // detect form init value after form is displayed
// check for form changes
if ($('#formId').serialize() != formInitVal) {
// show confirmation alert
}
I expanded on Slace's suggestion above, to include most editable elements and also excluding certain elements (with a CSS style called "srSearch" here) from causing the dirty flag to be set.
<script type="text/javascript">
var _isDirty = false;
$(document).ready(function () {
// Set exclude CSS class on radio-button list elements
$('table.srSearch input:radio').addClass("srSearch");
$("input[type='text'],input[type='radio'],select,textarea").not(".srSearch").change(function () {
_isDirty = true;
});
});
$(window).bind('beforeunload', function () {
if (_isDirty) {
return 'You have unsaved changes.';
}
});
var unsaved = false;
$(":input").change(function () {
unsaved = true;
});
function unloadPage() {
if (unsaved) {
alert("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;
This is exactly what the Fleegix.js plugin fleegix.form.diff (http://js.fleegix.org/plugins/form/diff) was created for. Serialize the initial state of the form on load using fleegix.form.toObject (http://js.fleegix.org/ref#fleegix.form.toObject) and save it in a variable, then compare with the current state using fleegix.form.diff on unload. Easy as pie.
A lot of outdated answers so here's something a little more modern.
ES6
let dirty = false
document.querySelectorAll('form').forEach(e => e.onchange = () => dirty = true)
One method, using arrays to hold the variables so changes can be tracked.
Here's a very simple method to detect changes, but the rest isn't as elegant.
Another method which is fairly simple and small, from Farfetched Blog:
<body onLoad="lookForChanges()" onBeforeUnload="return warnOfUnsavedChanges()">
<form>
<select name=a multiple>
<option value=1>1
<option value=2>2
<option value=3>3
</select>
<input name=b value=123>
<input type=submit>
</form>
<script>
var changed = 0;
function recordChange() {
changed = 1;
}
function recordChangeIfChangeKey(myevent) {
if (myevent.which && !myevent.ctrlKey && !myevent.ctrlKey)
recordChange(myevent);
}
function ignoreChange() {
changed = 0;
}
function lookForChanges() {
var origfunc;
for (i = 0; i < document.forms.length; i++) {
for (j = 0; j < document.forms[i].elements.length; j++) {
var formField=document.forms[i].elements[j];
var formFieldType=formField.type.toLowerCase();
if (formFieldType == 'checkbox' || formFieldType == 'radio') {
addHandler(formField, 'click', recordChange);
} else if (formFieldType == 'text' || formFieldType == 'textarea') {
if (formField.attachEvent) {
addHandler(formField, 'keypress', recordChange);
} else {
addHandler(formField, 'keypress', recordChangeIfChangeKey);
}
} else if (formFieldType == 'select-multiple' || formFieldType == 'select-one') {
addHandler(formField, 'change', recordChange);
}
}
addHandler(document.forms[i], 'submit', ignoreChange);
}
}
function warnOfUnsavedChanges() {
if (changed) {
if ("event" in window) //ie
event.returnValue = 'You have unsaved changes on this page, which will be discarded if you leave now. Click "Cancel" in order to save them first.';
else //netscape
return false;
}
}
function addHandler(target, eventName, handler) {
if (target.attachEvent) {
target.attachEvent('on'+eventName, handler);
} else {
target.addEventListener(eventName, handler, false);
}
}
</script>
In IE document.ready will not work properly it will update the values of input.
so we need to bind load event inside the document.ready function that will handle for IE browser also.
below is the code you should put inside the document.ready function.
$(document).ready(function () {
$(window).bind("load", function () {
$("input, select").change(function () {});
});
});
I have found that this one works in Chrome with an exception... The messages being returned do not match those in the script:
dataChanged = 0; // global variable flags unsaved changes
function bindForChange() {
$("input,checkbox,textarea,radio,select").bind("change", function (_event) {
dataChanged = 1;
});
$(":reset,:submit").bind("click", function (_event) {
dataChanged = 0;
});
}
function askConfirm() {
if (dataChanged) {
var message =
"You have some unsaved changes. Press OK to continue without saving.";
return message;
}
}
window.onbeforeunload = askConfirm;
window.onload = bindForChange;
The messages returned seem to be triggered by the specific type of action I'm performing. A RELOAD displays a question "Reload Site?
And a windows close returns a "Leave Site?" message.