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using onbeforeunload event, url change on selecting stay on this page

Rewriting the question -

I am trying to make a page on which if user leave the page (either to other link/website or closing window/tab) I want to show the onbeforeunload handeler saying we have a great offer for you? and if user choose to leave the page it should do the normal propogation but if he choose to stay on the page I need him to redirect it to offer page redirection is important, no compromise . For testing lets redirect to google.com

I made a program as follows -

var stayonthis = true;
  var a;
  function load() {
   window.onbeforeunload = function(e) {
        if(stayonthis){
         a = setTimeout('window.location.href="http://google.com";',100);
         stayonthis = false;    
         return "Do you really want to leave now?";
        }
        else {
            clearTimeout(a);
        }

    };
    window.onunload = function(e) {
         clearTimeout(a);
    };
  }
  window.onload = load;

but the problem is that if he click on the link to yahoo.com and choose to leave the page he is not going to yahoo but to google instead :(

Help Me !! Thanks in Advance

here is the fiddle code

here how you can test because onbeforeunload does not work on iframe well

This solution works in all cases, using back browser button, setting new url in address bar or use links. What i have found is that triggering onbeforeunload handler doesn't show the dialog attached to onbeforeunload handler. In this case (when triggering is needed), use a confirm box to show the user message. This workaround is tested in chrome/firefox and IE (7 to 10)

http://jsfiddle.net/W3vUB/4/show

http://jsfiddle.net/W3vUB/4/

EDIT: set DEMO on codepen, apparently jsFiddle doesn't like this snippet(?!) BTW, using bing.com due to google not allowing no more content being displayed inside iframe.

http://codepen.io/anon/pen/dYKKbZ

var a, b = false,
    c = "http://bing.com";

function triggerEvent(el, type) {
    if ((el[type] || false) && typeof el[type] == 'function') {
        el[type](el);
    }
}

$(function () {
    $('a:not([href^=#])').on('click', function (e) {
        e.preventDefault();
        if (confirm("Do you really want to leave now?")) c = this.href;


        triggerEvent(window, 'onbeforeunload');

    });
});

window.onbeforeunload = function (e) {
    if (b) return;
    a = setTimeout(function () {
        b = true;
        window.location.href = c;
        c = "http://bing.com";
        console.log(c);
    }, 500);
    return "Do you really want to leave now?";
}
window.onunload = function () {
    clearTimeout(a);
}

It's better to Check it local.
Check out the comments and try this: LIVE DEMO

var linkClick=false; 
document.onclick = function(e)
{
    linkClick = true;
    var elemntTagName = e.target.tagName;
    if(elemntTagName=='A')
    {
        e.target.getAttribute("href");
        if(!confirm('Are your sure you want to leave?'))
        {
           window.location.href = "http://google.com";
           console.log("http://google.com");
        }
        else
        {
            window.location.href = e.target.getAttribute("href");
            console.log(e.target.getAttribute("href"));
        }
        return false;
    }
}
function OnBeforeUnLoad () 
{
    return "Are you sure?";
    linkClick=false; 
    window.location.href = "http://google.com";
    console.log("http://google.com");
}

And change your html code to this:

<body onbeforeunload="if(linkClick == false) {return OnBeforeUnLoad()}">
    <a href="http://yahoo.com">try it</a>
</body>

After playing a while with this problem I did the following. It seems to work but it's not very reliable. The biggest issue is that the timed out function needs to bridge a large enough timespan for the browser to make a connection to the url in the link's href attribute.

jsfiddle to demonstrate . I used bing.com instead of google.com because of X-Frame-Options: SAMEORIGIN

var F = function(){}; // empty function
var offerUrl = 'http://bing.com';
var url;


var handler = function(e) {
    timeout = setTimeout(function () {
        console.log('location.assign');
        location.assign(offerUrl);

    /*
     * This value makes or breaks it.
     * You need enough time so the browser can make the connection to
     * the clicked links href else it will still redirect to the offer url.
     */
    }, 1400);

    // important!
    window.onbeforeunload = F;

    console.info('handler');
    return 'Do you wan\'t to leave now?';
};

window.onbeforeunload = handler;

Try the following , (adds a global function that checks the state all the time though).

var redirected=false;
$(window).bind('beforeunload', function(e){
    if(redirected)
        return;
    var orgLoc=window.location.href;
    $(window).bind('focus.unloadev',function(e){
        if(redirected==true)
            return;
        $(window).unbind('focus.unloadev');
        window.setTimeout(function(){
            if(window.location.href!=orgLoc)
                return;
            console.log('redirect...');
            window.location.replace('http://google.com');
        },6000);
        redirected=true;
    });
    console.log('before2'); 
    return "okdoky2";
});

$(window).unload(function(e){console.log('unloading...');redirected=true;});
<script>
        function endSession() {
            // Browser or Broswer tab is closed
            // Write code here
            alert('Browser or Broswer tab closed');
        }
</script>

<body onpagehide="endSession();">

I think you're confused about the progress of events, on before unload the page is still interacting, the return method is like a shortcut for return "confirm()", the return of the confirm however cannot be handled at all, so you can not really investigate the response of the user and decide upon it which way to go, the response is going to be immediately carried out as "yes" leave page, or "no" don't leave page...

Notice that you have already changed the source of the url to Google before you prompt user, this action, cannot be undone... unless maybe, you can setimeout to something like 5 seconds (but then if the user isn't quick enough it won't pick up his answer)

Edit: I've just made it a 5000 time lapse and it always goes to Yahoo! Never picks up the google change at all.

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