Book Image

TypeScript 4 Design Patterns and Best Practices

By : Theofanis Despoudis
Book Image

TypeScript 4 Design Patterns and Best Practices

By: Theofanis Despoudis

Overview of this book

Design patterns are critical armor for every developer to build maintainable apps. TypeScript 4 Design Patterns and Best Practices is a one-stop guide to help you learn design patterns and practices to develop scalable TypeScript applications. It will also serve as handy documentation for future maintainers. This book takes a hands-on approach to help you get up and running with the implementation of TypeScript design patterns and associated methodologies for writing testable code. You'll start by exploring the practical aspects of TypeScript 4 and its new features. The book will then take you through the traditional gang of four (GOF) design patterns in their classic and alternative form and show you how to use them in real-world development projects. Once you've got to grips with traditional design patterns, you'll advance to learning about their functional programming and reactive programming counterparts and how to couple them to deliver better and more idiomatic TypeScript code. By the end of this TypeScript book, you'll be able to efficiently recognize when and how to use the right design patterns in any practical use case and gain the confidence to work on scalable and maintainable TypeScript projects of any size.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
1
Section 1: Getting Started with TypeScript 4
4
Section 2: Core Design Patterns and Concepts
8
Section 3: Advanced Concepts and Best Practices

Summary

This chapter demonstrated all the fundamental aspects of behavioral design patterns and how to efficiently utilize them in practice. Those patterns focus on the communication connections among objects and how they perform them without introducing unnecessary complexity in the process.

You started by practicing the basics of the Strategy pattern for developing interchangeable algorithms. Then you discovered the details of the Chain of Responsibility pattern and how to create middleware that processes a request through multiple handlers. You also explored how the Command pattern uses standalone objects that contain all the information about a particular request. Using the Iterator pattern, you learned how to access a traversable structure in a way that does not expose its internal details. Next, you explored how the Mediator pattern can simplify the direct communication between objects. After that, you understood the core principles of the Memento pattern for storing and...