Book Image

Advanced Express Web Application Development

By : Andrew Keig
Book Image

Advanced Express Web Application Development

By: Andrew Keig

Overview of this book

Building an Express application that is reliable, robust, maintainable, testable, and can scale beyond a single server requires a bit of extra thought and effort. Express applications that need to survive in a production environment will need to reach out to the Node ecosystem and beyond, for support.You will start by laying the foundations of your software development journey, as you drive-out features under test. You will move on quickly to expand on your existing knowledge, learning how to create a web API and a consuming client. You will then introduce a real-time element in your application.Following on from this, you will begin a process of incrementally improving your application as you tackle security, introduce SSL support, and how to handle security vulnerabilities. Next, the book will take you through the process of scaling and then decoupling your application. Finally, you will take a look at various ways you can improve your application's performance and reliability.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
Advanced Express Web Application Development
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Templates


Our master page contains the following sections. In order to facilitate a client-side templating model using backbone.js, we will split up our master page into templates.

Let's create a new folder called ./templates and add the following files:

./templates
  projects.hbs
  project-form.hbs
  repositories.hbs
  commits.hbs
  issues.hbs

In order to avoid compiling the templates on demand, let's install the grunt task grunt-contrib-handlebars, which will precompile our handlebar templates:

npm install grunt-contrib-handlebars --save-dev

We outline the grunt configuration for our handlebars compilation in the following code; it simply takes as input a template location templates/*.hbs and compiles these templates into a single JavaScript file and stores it at public/components/vision/templates.js.

grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-contrib-handlebars');

handlebars: {
  compile: {
    options: {
      namespace: "visiontemplates"
    },
    files: {
      "public/components/vision/templates.js...