Book Image

Mastering JavaScript Single Page Application Development

Book Image

Mastering JavaScript Single Page Application Development

Overview of this book

Single-page web applications—or SPAs, as they are commonly referred to—are quickly becoming the de facto standard for web app development. The fact that a major part of the app runs inside a single web page makes it very interesting and appealing. Also, the accelerated growth of browser capabilities is pushing us closer to the day when all apps will run entirely in the browser. This book will take your JavaScript development skills to the next level by teaching you to create a single-page application within a full-stack JavaScript environment. Using only JavaScript, you can go from being a front-end developer to a full-stack application developer with relative ease. You will learn to cross the boundary from front-end development to server-side development through the use of JavaScript on both ends. Use your existing knowledge of JavaScript by learning to manage a JSON document data store with MongoDB, writing a JavaScript powered REST API with Node.js and Express, and designing a front-end powered by AngularJS. This book will teach you to leverage the MEAN stack to do everything from document database design, routing REST web API requests, data-binding within views, and adding authentication and security to building a full-fledged, complex, single-page web application. In addition to building a full-stack JavaScript app, you will learn to test it with JavaScript-powered testing tools such as Mocha, Karma, and Jasmine. Finally, you will learn about deployment and scaling so that you can launch your own apps into the real world.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Mastering JavaScript Single Page Application Development
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Free Chapter
1
Getting Organized with NPM, Bower, and Grunt
13
Testing with Mocha, Karma, and More

Setting up our dashboard


Since this is a SPA, we need to set up a single page to contain our application. In our case, we are going to build a user dashboard. That dashboard will allow a user to create giftlists (such as birthday wish lists), choose who they want to share them with, and see lists that have been shared with them. In the next chapter, we're going to build authentication so that individual users will only be able to see their own dashboards, but for now we need to mock things up without authentication a bit.

We'll need a couple of routes, and a view. We're also going to use Bootstrap to style our view a little.

Building the view

We need to create a view for our dashboard. Create a new folder in your views directory called dash. Inside that folder, create a file called dashboard.ejs:

<!DOCTYPE html> 
<html> 
<head> 
    <title>Dashboard for <%= user.firstName %> <%= user.lastName %> </title> 
</head> 
<body...