Many NoSQL databases exist in the market today, but MongoDB, by the company with the same name (http://www.mongodb.org/), is the most popular among them. An important distinction between relational and NoSQL databases is that NoSQL databases are schema-less; this means you don't have to define the tables before inserting data. This in itself, of course, adds a lot to the flexibility and agility in the use of these databases; for example, adding a new field no longer means that you have to alter the table and run the SQL update commands. As there are no SQL queries to be used here, all the data retrieval happens via standard CRUD calls (create, read, update, and delete). In MongoDB, this is known as insert, find, update, and remove. MongoDB presents itself as an open source, distributed, document-oriented database: each data record is actually a document. A table is called a collection in MongoDB. Documents are stored in a JSON-like format called Binary JSON (BSON...
Learning Dart
Learning Dart
Overview of this book
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Learning Dart
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Free Chapter
Dart – A Modern Web Programming Language
Getting to Work with Dart
Structuring Code with Classes and Libraries
Modeling Web Applications with Model Concepts and Dartlero
Handling the DOM in a New Way
Combining HTML5 Forms with Dart
Building Games with HTML5 and Dart
Developing Business Applications with Polymer Web Components
Modeling More Complex Applications with Dartling
MVC Web and UI Frameworks in Dart – An Overview
Local Data and Client-Server Communication
Data-driven Web Applications with MySQL and MongoDB
Index
Customer Reviews