Book Image

MEAN Cookbook

By : Nicholas McClay
Book Image

MEAN Cookbook

By: Nicholas McClay

Overview of this book

The MEAN Stack is a framework for web application development using JavaScript-based technologies; MongoDB, Express, Angular, and Node.js. If you want to expand your understanding of using JavaScript to produce a fully functional standalone web application, including the web server, user interface, and database, then this book can help guide you through that transition. This book begins by configuring the frontend of the MEAN stack web application using the Angular JavaScript framework. We then implement common user interface enhancements before moving on to configuring the server layer of our MEAN stack web application using Express for our backend APIs. You will learn to configure the database layer of your MEAN stack web application using MongoDB and the Mongoose framework, including modeling relationships between documents. You will explore advanced topics such as optimizing your web application using WebPack as well as the use of automated testing with the Mocha and Chai frameworks. By the end of the book, you should have acquired a level of proficiency that allows you to confidently build a full production-ready and scalable MEAN stack application.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Configuring WebPack for use in Node.js applications

Reducing the number of asset requests means cutting down on the number of HTTP requests for resources the browser makes when loading the page. The fewer of these requests that are made, the better the overall application load speed, because HTTP as a protocol incurs a minor performance overhead, regardless of the size of the file itself. The most common approach to help this issue is through the use of JavaScript and CSS concatenation tools that merge multiple files in order to create fewer resources that are needed to load the page. With tools such as Angular-CLI, this is actually built into our application by default through the integrated WebPack build system. To do the same for our Express application, we will need to implement our own custom WebPack build system.

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