Book Image

JavaScript from Frontend to Backend

By : Eric Sarrion
Book Image

JavaScript from Frontend to Backend

By: Eric Sarrion

Overview of this book

JavaScript, the most widely used programming language in the world, has numerous libraries and modules and a dizzying array of need-to-know topics. Picking a starting point can be difficult. Enter JavaScript from Frontend to Backend. This concise, practical guide will get you up to speed in next to no time. This book begins with the basics of variables and objects in JavaScript and then moves quickly on to building components on the client-side with Vue.js and a simple list management application. After that, the focus shifts to the server-side and Node.js, where you’ll examine the MVC model and explore the Express module. Once you've got to grips with the server-side and the client-side, the only thing that remains is the database. You’ll discover MongoDB and the Mongoose module. In the final chapter of this fast-paced guide, you'll combine all these pieces to integrate a Vue.js application into a Node.js server, using Express to structure the server code and MongoDB to store the information. By the end of this book, you will have the skills and confidence to successfully implement JavaScript concepts in your own projects and begin your career as a JavaScript developer.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
1
Part 1: JavaScript Syntax
4
Part 2: JavaScript on the Client-Side
8
Part 3: JavaScript on the Server-Side

Using internal Node.js modules

Node.js already has internal modules. They can also be used with the require(moduleName) instruction seen previously.

Let’s look at an example of an internal module. There is, for example, the "fs" module in the Node.js system. The name "fs" is short for file system. This module allows you to interact with the internal file system of Node.js.

Now, we will use the "fs" module to read the contents of a file.

Reading the contents of a file

Let’s use the "fs" module to read the file named file1.txt located in the current directory (where the test.js file is located). Here are the contents of this file:

file1.txt file (in the directory where test.js is located)

This is the content
of the file file1.txt
located in
the current directory.

The program that uses the "fs" module and displays the contents of the file is as follows:

Reading and displaying the contents of the file...