Book Image

Full Stack FastAPI, React, and MongoDB

By : Marko Aleksendrić
4 (1)
Book Image

Full Stack FastAPI, React, and MongoDB

4 (1)
By: Marko Aleksendrić

Overview of this book

If you need to develop web applications quickly, where do you turn? Enter the FARM stack. The FARM stack combines the power of the Python ecosystem with REST and MongoDB and makes building web applications easy and fast. This book is a fast-paced, concise, and hands-on beginner’s guide that will equip you with the skills you need to quickly build web applications by diving just deep enough into the intricacies of the stack's components. The book quickly introduces each element of the stack and then helps you merge them to build a medium-sized web application. You'll set up a document store with MongoDB, build a simple API with FastAPI, and create an application with React. Security is crucial on the web, so you'll learn about authentication and authorization with JSON Web Tokens. You'll also understand how to optimize images, cache responses with Redis, and add additional features to your application as well as explore tips, tricks, and best practices to make your development experience a breeze. Before you know it, you'll be deploying the application to different platforms. By the end of this book, you will have built a couple of functional applications efficiently and will have the springboard you need to delve into diverse and more specialized domains.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
1
Part 1 – Introduction to the FARM Stack and the Components
6
Part 2 – Parts of the Stack Working Together
10
Part 3 – Deployment and Final Thoughts

Summary

We have managed to create a very rudimentary React single-page application and we connected it to our FastAPI backend. Our app is able to display cars, edit their price, and delete cars from MongoDB, so we can safely say that we have achieved the initial goal – we have CRUD functionality.

This application is not only a kind of proof-of-concept, but it is also completely unusable for any kind of work: our API is not protected in any way and anyone with the URL of our endpoint can begin issuing requests, inserting fake cars, or editing and deleting existing ones! We could, of course, run MongoDB on our own local computer, but that would kind of defy the purpose of this book.

In the next chapter, we will introduce the basic ideas and concepts of authentication and authorization and we will explore ways in which we can make our FARM stack apps secure and usable.