Book Image

Advanced TypeScript Programming Projects

By : Peter O'Hanlon
Book Image

Advanced TypeScript Programming Projects

By: Peter O'Hanlon

Overview of this book

With the demand for ever more complex websites, the need to write robust, standard-compliant JavaScript has never been greater. TypeScript is modern JavaScript with the support of a first-class type system, which makes it simpler to write complex web systems. With this book, you’ll explore core concepts and learn by building a series of websites and TypeScript apps. You’ll start with an introduction to TypeScript features that are often overlooked in other books, before moving on to creating a simple markdown parser. You’ll then explore React and get up to speed with creating a client-side contacts manager. Next, the book will help you discover the Angular framework and use the MEAN stack to create a photo gallery. Later sections will assist you in creating a GraphQL Angular Todo app and then writing a Socket.IO chatroom. The book will also lead you through developing your final Angular project which is a mapping app. As you progress, you’ll gain insights into React with Docker and microservices. You’ll even focus on how to build an image classification program with machine learning using TensorFlow. Finally, you’ll learn to combine TypeScript and C# to create an ASP.NET Core-based music library app. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to confidently use TypeScript 3.0 and different JavaScript frameworks to build high-quality apps.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

The MEAN stack

When we use the term the MEAN stack, we are talking about a set of separate JavaScript technologies that go together to create web applications that span both the client and server side. MEAN is an acronym of the core technologies used:

  • MongoDB: This is something called a document database, which is used to store data in JSON form. Document databases are different from relational databases, so if you have come from a technology such as SQL Server or Oracle, it can take a little bit of time to adjust to the way that document databases work.
  • Express: This is a backend web application framework that sits on top of Node.js. The idea behind having Express in the stack is that it simplifies things that Node.js provides on the server side. While Node.js can do everything that Express does, the complexity of writing code to do things such as adding cookies or routing web...