Book Image

Node.js Design Patterns - Third Edition

By : Mario Casciaro, Luciano Mammino
5 (1)
Book Image

Node.js Design Patterns - Third Edition

5 (1)
By: Mario Casciaro, Luciano Mammino

Overview of this book

In this book, we will show you how to implement a series of best practices and design patterns to help you create efficient and robust Node.js applications with ease. We kick off by exploring the basics of Node.js, analyzing its asynchronous event driven architecture and its fundamental design patterns. We then show you how to build asynchronous control flow patterns with callbacks, promises and async/await. Next, we dive into Node.js streams, unveiling their power and showing you how to use them at their full capacity. Following streams is an analysis of different creational, structural, and behavioral design patterns that take full advantage of JavaScript and Node.js. Lastly, the book dives into more advanced concepts such as Universal JavaScript, scalability and messaging patterns to help you build enterprise-grade distributed applications. Throughout the book, you’ll see Node.js in action with the help of several real-life examples leveraging technologies such as LevelDB, Redis, RabbitMQ, ZeroMQ, and many others. They will be used to demonstrate a pattern or technique, but they will also give you a great introduction to the Node.js ecosystem and its set of solutions.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
14
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15
Index

Summary

In this chapter, you were gently introduced to a set of traditional design patterns concerning the creation of objects. Some of those patterns are so basic, and yet essential at the same time, that you have probably already used them in one way or another.

Patterns such as Factory and Singleton are, for example, two of the most ubiquitous in object-oriented programming in general. However, in JavaScript, their implementation and significance are very different from what was thought up by the Gang of Four book. For example, Factory becomes a very versatile pattern that works in perfect harmony with the hybrid nature of the JavaScript language, that is, half object-oriented and half functional. On the other hand, Singleton becomes so trivial to implement that it's almost a non-pattern, but it carries a set of caveats that you should have learned to take into account.

Among the patterns you've learned in this chapter, the Builder pattern may seem the ...