56

I have a react component like :

import React, { PropTypes, Component } from 'react'


class MyComponent extends Component {

    componentDidMount() {
       window.addEventListener("beforeunload", function (event) {
            console.log("hellooww")
            event.returnValue = "Hellooww"
        })
    }

    componentWillUnmount() {
        window.removeEventListener("beforeunload", function (event) {
            console.log("hellooww")
            event.returnValue = "Hellooww"
        })
    }

    render() {

        return (
            <div>
                Some content
            </div>
        )
    }

}

export default MyComponent

Here event lister is added to the component. When I refresh the page it gives me pop up asking to leave the page.

But when I go to another page and do refresh it again shows the same pop-up.

I am removing the eventListener from the component on componentWillUnmount. Then why it is not being removed?

How can I remove the beforeunload event on other pages?

uneet7
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gamer
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5 Answers5

111

The removeEventListener should get the reference to the same callback that was assigned in addEventListener. Recreating the function won't do. The solution is to create the callback elsewhere (onUnload in this example), and pass it as reference to both addEventListener and removeEventListener:

import React, { PropTypes, Component } from 'react';


class MyComponent extends Component {
    onUnload = e => { // the method that will be used for both add and remove event
       e.preventDefault();
       e.returnValue = '';
    }

    componentDidMount() {
       window.addEventListener("beforeunload", this.onUnload);
    }

    componentWillUnmount() {
        window.removeEventListener("beforeunload", this.onUnload);
    }

    render() {
        return (
            <div>
                Some content
            </div>
        );
    }

}

export default MyComponent

React hooks

You can abstract the beforeunload event handling to a custom hook with the useRef, and useEffect hooks.

The custom hook useUnload receives a function (fn) and assigns it to the current ref. It calls useEffect once (on component mount), and sets the event handler to be an anonymous function that will call cb.current (if it's defined), and returns a cleanup function to remove the event handler, when the component is removed.

import { useRef, useEffect } from 'react';

const useUnload = fn => {
  const cb = useRef(fn); // init with fn, so that type checkers won't assume that current might be undefined

  useEffect(() => {
    cb.current = fn;
  }, [fn]);

  useEffect(() => {
    const onUnload = (...args) => cb.current?.(...args);

    window.addEventListener("beforeunload", onUnload);

    return () => window.removeEventListener("beforeunload", onUnload);
  }, []);
};

export default useUnload;

Usage:

const MyComponent = () => {
  useUnload(e => {
    e.preventDefault();
    e.returnValue = '';
  });

  return (
    <div>
      Some content
    </div>
  );
};
Ori Drori
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4

Ori's solution didn't work for me. I had to do this to make it work... (Thank you docs)

  componentDidMount() {
    window.addEventListener('beforeunload', this.handleLeavePage);
  }

  componentWillUnmount() {
    window.removeEventListener('beforeunload', this.handleLeavePage);
  }

  handleLeavePage(e) {
    const confirmationMessage = 'Some message';
    e.returnValue = confirmationMessage;     // Gecko, Trident, Chrome 34+
    return confirmationMessage;              // Gecko, WebKit, Chrome <34
  }
Michael
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  • If you want to refer to your react component (this), change the second line to this.handleLeavePage.bind(this) – Michael Jan 10 '18 at 16:54
  • This only works on Chrome for me. Not firefox or safari. – Symphony0084 Sep 03 '19 at 20:43
  • 2
    Ah. Just so nobody makes the same mistake as I did at first - the confirmationMessage cannot be blank or no popup will appear. Now works in Chrome, Firefox, and Safari – Symphony0084 Sep 03 '19 at 20:57
3

You can use following hook:

https://www.npmjs.com/package/react-beforeunload

Example:

import { Beforeunload } from 'react-beforeunload';

// ...

<Beforeunload onBeforeunload={(event) => event.preventDefault()}>
  <MyApp />
</Beforeunload>
Eduardo Cuomo
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0

Create same function and pass in addEventListener and removeEventListener. When returnValue returns a value other than null or undefined, the user will be prompted to confirm the page unload.

 import React, { PropTypes, Component } from 'react'
    
    
    class MyComponent extends Component {
        beforeUnLoad = e => {
          e.preventDefault();
          e.stopImmediatePropagation();
          e.returnValue = "leave";
    
      };
    
        componentDidMount() {
           window.addEventListener("beforeunload", this.beforeUnLoad)
        }
    
        componentWillUnmount() {
            window.removeEventListener("beforeunload", this.beforeUnLoad)
        }
    
        render() {
    
            return (
                <div>
                    Some content
                </div>
            )
        }
    
    }
    
    export default MyComponent
Versha Gupta
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0

hooks/FC answer:

const MyComponent = () => {

 const beforeUnLoad = (e) => {
   e.preventDefault();
   e.stopPropagation();
   e.returnValue = '';
 }
    
 useEffect(() => {
   window.addEventListener('beforeunload', beforeUnLoad);
  
   return () => {
     window.removeEventListener('beforeunload', beforeUnLoad);
   };
 }, []);

 return <>Hello World</>
}
Facundo Colombier
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