Book Image

TypeScript 2.x By Example

By : Sachin Ohri
Book Image

TypeScript 2.x By Example

By: Sachin Ohri

Overview of this book

The TypeScript language, compiler, and open source development toolset brings JavaScript development up to the enterprise level. It allows you to use ES5, ES6, and ES7 JavaScript language features today, including classes, interfaces, generics, modules, and more. Its simple typing syntax enables building large, robust applications using object-oriented techniques and industry-standard design principles. This book aims at teaching you how to get up and running with TypeScript development in the most practical way possible. Taking you through two exciting projects built from scratch, you will learn the basics of TypeScript, before progressing to functions, generics, promises, and callbacks. Then, you’ll get to implement object-oriented programming as well as optimize your applications with effective memory management. You’ll also learn to test and secure your applications, before deploying them. Starting with a basic SPA built using Angular, you will progress on to building, maybe, a Chat application or a cool application. You’ll also learn how to use NativeScript to build a cool mobile application. Each of these applications with be explained in detail, allowing you to grasp the concepts fast. By the end of this book, you will have not only built two amazing projects but you will also have the skills necessary to take your development to the next level.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

Summary

In this chapter, our focus was on deploying the Sample Trello application on Microsoft Azure. We looked at the capabilities of Azure, and of cloud deployment in general. We saw the advantages of using the cloud as our deployment platform in comparison to the traditional in-house deployment.

Then we delved into the deployment of our Sample Trello application using a web app service. In web app services, we looked at how we can deploy our application using FTP, and using GitHub as our deployment source. We looked at how to create a new web app service, integrate GitHub with that service, and also how we can manage the app service plan to provide the most economical setup.

In this book, we have focused on learning TypeScript and Angular in depth by developing a couple of applications. This allowed us to not only focus on concepts, but their implementation as well. The next...