Book Image

Node.js Web Development - Fifth Edition

By : David Herron
Book Image

Node.js Web Development - Fifth Edition

By: David Herron

Overview of this book

Node.js is the leading choice of server-side web development platform, enabling developers to use the same tools and paradigms for both server-side and client-side software. This updated fifth edition of Node.js Web Development focuses on the new features of Node.js 14, Express 4.x, and ECMAScript, taking you through modern concepts, techniques, and best practices for using Node.js. The book starts by helping you get to grips with the concepts of building server-side web apps with Node.js. You’ll learn how to develop a complete Node.js web app, with a backend database tier to help you explore several databases. You'll deploy the app to real web servers, including a cloud hosting platform built on AWS EC2 using Terraform and Docker Swarm, while integrating other tools such as Redis and NGINX. As you advance, you'll learn about unit and functional testing, along with deploying test infrastructure using Docker. Finally, you'll discover how to harden Node.js app security, use Let's Encrypt to provision the HTTPS service, and implement several forms of app security with the help of expert practices. With each chapter, the book will help you put your knowledge into practice throughout the entire life cycle of developing a web app. By the end of this Node.js book, you’ll have gained practical Node.js web development knowledge and be able to build and deploy your own apps on a public web hosting solution.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
1
Section 1: Introduction to Node.js
6
Section 2: Developing the Express Application
12
Section 3: Deployment

Flexbox and CSS Grids

Two new technologies impacting web application development are these new CSS layout methodologies. The CSS3 committee has been working on several fronts, including page layout.

In the distant past, we used nested HTML tables for page layout. That is a bad memory that we don't have to revisit. More recently, we've been using a box model using <div> elements, and even at times using absolute or relative placement techniques. All these techniques have been suboptimal in several ways, some more than others.

One popular layout technique is to divide the horizontal space into columns and assign a certain number of columns to each thing on the page. With some frameworks, we can even have nested <div> elements, each with their own set of columns. Bootstrap 3, and other modern frameworks, used that layout technique.

The two new CSS layout methodologies, Flexbox (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CSS_flex-box_layout) and CSS Grids (https://developer.mozilla...