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Node.js Design Patterns

Node.js Design Patterns - Fourth Edition

By : Luciano Mammino, Mario Casciaro
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Node.js Design Patterns

Node.js Design Patterns

5 (3)
By: Luciano Mammino, Mario Casciaro

Overview of this book

Node.js underpins much of modern web development, reliably powering APIs and full-stack apps across all industries. Authors Luciano Mammino and Mario Casciaro offer a practical guide that unpacks the JavaScript runtime so you can write reliable, high-performance Node.js apps. Building on the highly rated third edition, this new edition adds fresh case studies and the latest Node.js developments: newer APIs and libraries, ESM improvements, practical security and production tips, and guidance on using Node.js with TypeScript. It also introduces a new chapter on testing that gives you a full introduction to testing philosophy and practical guidance on writing unit, integration, and end-to-end tests, giving you the confidence to write functional, stable, and reliable code. Real-world, end-to-end examples throughout the book show how to build microservices and distributed systems with Node.js, integrating production-proven technologies such as Redis, RabbitMQ, LevelDB, and ZeroMQ, the same components you’ll find in scalable deployments at companies of all sizes. End-of-chapter exercises consolidate your understanding. By the end of this Node.js book, you’ll have the design patterns, mindset, and hands-on skills every serious Node.js professional needs to confidently architect robust, efficient, and maintainable applications.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
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14
Other Books You May Enjoy
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Index

Template

The next pattern that we are going to analyze is called Template, and it has a lot in common with the Strategy pattern. The Template pattern defines an abstract class that implements the skeleton (representing the common parts) of a component, where some of its steps are left undefined. Subclasses can then fill the gaps in the component by implementing the missing parts, called template methods. The intention of this pattern is to make it possible to define a family of classes that are all variations of a family of components. The following UML diagram shows the structure that we just described:

Figure 9.4: UML diagram of the Template pattern

Figure 9.4: UML diagram of the Template pattern

The three concrete classes shown in Figure 9.4 extend the template class and provide an implementation for templateMethod(), which is abstract or pure virtual, to use C++ terminology. In plain JavaScript, we don’t have a formal way to define abstract classes, so all we can do is leave the method undefined or assign...

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