Book Image

Node.js Design Patterns - Second Edition

By : Joel Purra, Luciano Mammino, Mario Casciaro
Book Image

Node.js Design Patterns - Second Edition

By: Joel Purra, Luciano Mammino, Mario Casciaro

Overview of this book

Node.js is a massively popular software platform that lets you use JavaScript to easily create scalable server-side applications. It allows you to create efficient code, enabling a more sustainable way of writing software made of only one language across the full stack, along with extreme levels of reusability, pragmatism, simplicity, and collaboration. Node.js is revolutionizing the web and the way people and companies create their software. In this book, we will take you on a journey across various ideas and components, and the challenges you would commonly encounter while designing and developing software using the Node.js platform. You will also discover the "Node.js way" of dealing with design and coding decisions. The book kicks off by exploring the basics of Node.js describing it's asynchronous single-threaded architecture and the main design patterns. It then shows you how to master the asynchronous control flow patterns,and the stream component and it culminates into a detailed list of Node.js implementations of the most common design patterns as well as some specific design patterns that are exclusive to the Node.js world.Lastly, it dives into more advanced concepts such as Universal Javascript, and scalability' and it's meant to conclude the journey by giving the reader all the necessary concepts to be able to build an enterprise grade application using Node.js.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Node.js Design Patterns - Second Edition
Credits
About the Authors
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Decorator


Decorator is a structural pattern that consists of dynamically augmenting the behavior of an existing object. It's different from classical inheritance, because the behavior is not added to all the objects of the same class, but only to the instances that are explicitly decorated.

Implementation-wise, it is very similar to the Proxy pattern, but instead of enhancing or modifying the behavior of the existing interface of an object, it augments it with new functionalities, as described in the following figure:

In the previous figure, the Decorator object is extending the Component object by adding the methodC() operation. The existing methods are usually delegated to the decorated object, without further processing. Of course, if necessary we can easily combine the Proxy pattern so that the calls to the existing methods can be intercepted and manipulated as well.

Techniques for implementing Decorators

Although Proxy and Decorator are conceptually two different patterns with different...