Book Image

Node.js Web Development - Fourth Edition

By : David Herron
Book Image

Node.js Web Development - Fourth Edition

By: David Herron

Overview of this book

Node.js is a server-side JavaScript platform using an event-driven, non-blocking I/O model allowing users to build fast and scalable data-intensive applications running in real time. This book gives you an excellent starting point, bringing you straight to the heart of developing web applications with Node.js. You will progress from a rudimentary knowledge of JavaScript and server-side development to being able to create, maintain, deploy and test your own Node.js application.You will understand the importance of transitioning to functions that return Promise objects, and the difference between fs, fs/promises and fs-extra. With this book you'll learn how to use the HTTP Server and Client objects, data storage with both SQL and MongoDB databases, real-time applications with Socket.IO, mobile-first theming with Bootstrap, microservice deployment with Docker, authenticating against third-party services using OAuth, and use some well known tools to beef up security of Express 4.16 applications.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Finding and loading ES6 modules using import


The import statement is used to load ES6 modules, and it only works inside an ES6 module. Because ES6 modules are loaded asynchronously, the require() statement cannot load ES6 modules. As we said earlier, ES6 modules are recognized by Node.js by the.mjsextension.  The ECMAScript TC-39 committee has (or plans to) officially register that file extension with the recognized authorities so that regular tools will recognize both file extensions as JavaScript.

The module specifier one hands to the import statement is interpreted as a URL. For the time being, Node.js will only accept file: URL because of the security implications of loading modules over the Internet. Because it's a URL, some characters such as :, ?, #, or % must receive special treatment. For example:

import'./foo?search';
import'./foo#hash';

These are valid module specifiers where ?search and #hash have the sort of meaning you'd expect in a URL. So long as Node.js only supports file:...