Book Image

Phoenix Web Development

By : Brandon Richey
Book Image

Phoenix Web Development

By: Brandon Richey

Overview of this book

Phoenix is a modern web development framework that is used to build API’s and web applications. It is built on Elixir and runs on Erlang VM which makes it much faster than other options. With Elixir and Phoenix, you build your application the right way, ready to scale and ready for the increasing demands of real-time web applications. This book covers the basics of the Phoenix web framework, showing you how to build a community voting application, and is divided into three parts. In the first part, you will be introduced to Phoenix and Elixir and understand the core terminologies that are used to describe them. You will also learn to build controller pages, store and retrieve data, add users to your app pages and protect your database. In the second section you will be able to reinforce your knowledge of architecting real time applications in phoenix and not only debug these applications but also diagnose issues in them. In the third and final section you will have the complete understanding of deploying and running the phoenix application and should be comfortable to make your first application release By the end of this book, you'll have a strong grasp of all of the core fundamentals of the Phoenix framework, and will have built a full production-ready web application from scratch.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
4
Introducing User Accounts and Sessions

Building our API

If we try to run API requests against our application right now using a tool like a cURL or a Postman we will (rightfully) get an error message since we have no real framework in place to serve API requests. The good news is that Phoenix makes everything incredibly simple to build a new API with very, very little dependency on extra libraries to get everything put together.

In fact, building an API in Phoenix is such a simple endeavor that it has completely replaced my usual defaults of other languages and tools! Everything is given to you in some way or another without requiring a lot of extra work or configuration, and having an API live seamlessly side-by-side with the rest of your application is a breeze!

If we start off by making a request to our non-existing API routes, we will (as expected) get an error message. For purposes of this chapter, I'll be...