NodeJS Notes for Professionals book

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    Amazing collection of free programming books

    The Notes for Professionals book is compiled from Stack Overflow Documentation, the content is written by the beautiful people at Stack Overflow. Text content is released under Creative Commons BY-SA. See credits at the end of this book whom contributed to the various chapters. Images may be copyright of their respective owners unless otherwise specified

    Book created for educational purposes and is not affiliated with group(s), company(s) nor Stack Overflow. All trademarks belong to their respective company owners

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    章节目录

    • 1-1
      Content list
    • 1-2
      About
    • 1-3
      Chapter 1: Getting started with Node.js
    • 1-4
      Section 1.1: Hello World HTTP server
    • 1-5
      Section 1.2: Hello World command line
    • 1-6
      Section 1.3: Hello World with Express
    • 1-7
      Section 1.4: Installing and Running Node.js
    • 1-8
      Section 1.5: Debugging Your NodeJS Application
    • 1-9
      Section 1.6: Hello World basic routing
    • 1-10
      Section 1.7: Hello World in the REPL
    • 1-11
      Section 1.8: Deploying your application online
    • 1-12
      Section 1.9: Core modules
    • 1-13
      Section 1.10: TLS Socket: server and client
    • 1-14
      Section 1.11: How to get a basic HTTPS web server up and running!
    • 1-15
      Chapter 2: npm
    • 1-16
      Section 2.1: Installing packages
    • 1-17
      Section 2.2: Uninstalling packages
    • 1-18
      Section 2.3: Setting up a package configuration
    • 1-19
      Section 2.4: Running scripts
    • 1-20
      Section 2.5: Basic semantic versioning
    • 1-21
      Section 2.6: Publishing a package
    • 1-22
      Section 2.7: Removing extraneous packages
    • 1-23
      Section 2.8: Listing currently installed packages
    • 1-24
      Section 2.9: Updating npm and packages
    • 1-25
      Section 2.10: Scopes and repositories
    • 1-26
      Section 2.11: Linking projects for faster debugging and development
    • 1-27
      Section 2.12: Locking modules to specific versions
    • 1-28
      Section 2.13: Setting up for globally installed packages
    • 1-29
      Chapter 3: Web Apps With Express
    • 1-30
      Section 3.1: Getting Started
    • 1-31
      Section 3.2: Basic routing
    • 1-32
      Section 3.3: Modular express application
    • 1-33
      Section 3.4: Using a Template Engine
    • 1-34
      Section 3.5: JSON API with ExpressJS
    • 1-35
      Section 3.6: Serving static files
    • 1-36
      Section 3.7: Adding Middleware
    • 1-37
      Section 3.8: Error Handling
    • 1-38
      Section 3.9: Getting info from the request
    • 1-39
      Section 3.10: Error handling in Express
    • 1-40
      Section 3.11: Hook: How to execute code before any req and after any res
    • 1-41
      Section 3.12: Setting cookies with cookie-parser
    • 1-42
      Section 3.13: Custom middleware in Express
    • 1-43
      Section 3.14: Named routes in Django-style
    • 1-44
      Section 3.15: Hello World
    • 1-45
      Section 3.16: Using middleware and the next callback
    • 1-46
      Section 3.17: Error handling
    • 1-47
      Section 3.18: Handling POST Requests
    • 1-48
      Chapter 4: Filesystem I/O
    • 1-49
      Section 4.1: Asynchronously Read from Files
    • 1-50
      Section 4.2: Listing Directory Contents with readdir or readdirSync
    • 1-51
      Section 4.3: Copying files by piping streams
    • 1-52
      Section 4.4: Reading from a file synchronously
    • 1-53
      Section 4.5: Check Permissions of a File or Directory
    • 1-54
      Section 4.6: Checking if a file or a directory exists
    • 1-55
      Section 4.7: Determining the line count of a text file
    • 1-56
      Section 4.8: Reading a file line by line
    • 1-57
      Section 4.9: Avoiding race conditions when creating or using an existing directory
    • 1-58
      Section 4.10: Cloning a file using streams
    • 1-59
      Section 4.11: Writing to a file using writeFile or writeFileSync
    • 1-60
      Section 4.12: Changing contents of a text file
    • 1-61
      Section 4.13: Deleting a file using unlink or unlinkSync
    • 1-62
      Section 4.14: Reading a file into a Buer using streams
    • 1-63
      Chapter 5: Exporting and Consuming Modules
    • 1-64
      Section 5.1: Creating a hello-world.js module
    • 1-65
      Section 5.2: Loading and using a module
    • 1-66
      Section 5.3: Folder as a module
    • 1-67
      Section 5.4: Every module injected only once
    • 1-68
      Section 5.5: Module loading from node_modules
    • 1-69
      Section 5.6: Building your own modules
    • 1-70
      Section 5.7: Invalidating the module cache
    • 1-71
      Chapter 6: Exporting and Importing Module in node.js
    • 1-72
      Section 6.1: Exporting with ES6 syntax
    • 1-73
      Section 6.2: Using a simple module in node.js
    • 1-74
      Chapter 7: How modules are loaded
    • 1-75
      Section 7.1: Global Mode
    • 1-76
      Section 7.2: Loading modules
    • 1-77
      Chapter 8: Cluster Module
    • 1-78
      Section 8.1: Hello World
    • 1-79
      Section 8.2: Cluster Example
    • 1-80
      Chapter 9: Readline
    • 1-81
      Section 9.1: Line-by-line file reading
    • 1-82
      Section 9.2: Prompting user input via CLI
    • 1-83
      Chapter 10: package.json
    • 1-84
      Section 10.1: Exploring package.json
    • 1-85
      Section 10.2: Scripts
    • 1-86
      Section 10.3: Basic project definition
    • 1-87
      Section 10.4: Dependencies
    • 1-88
      Section 10.5: Extended project definition
    • 1-89
      Chapter 11: Event Emitters
    • 1-90
      Section 11.1: Basics
    • 1-91
      Section 11.2: Get the names of the events that are subscribed to
    • 1-92
      Section 11.3: HTTP Analytics through an Event Emitter
    • 1-93
      Section 11.4: Get the number of listeners registered to listen for a specific event
    • 1-94
      Chapter 12: Autoreload on changes
    • 1-95
      Section 12.1: Autoreload on source code changes using nodemon
    • 1-96
      Section 12.2: Browsersync
    • 1-97
      Chapter 13: Environment
    • 1-98
      Section 13.1: Accessing environment variables
    • 1-99
      Section 13.2: process.argv command line arguments
    • 1-100
      Section 13.3: Loading environment properties from a "property file"
    • 1-101
      Section 13.4: Using dierent Properties/Configuration for dierent environments like dev, qa, staging etc
    • 1-102
      Chapter 14: Callback to Promise
    • 1-103
      Section 14.1: Promisifying a callback
    • 1-104
      Section 14.2: Manually promisifying a callback
    • 1-105
      Section 14.3: setTimeout promisified
    • 1-106
      Chapter 15: Executing files or commands with Child Processes
    • 1-107
      Section 15.1: Spawning a new process to execute a command
    • 1-108
      Section 15.2: Spawning a shell to execute a command
    • 1-109
      Section 15.3: Spawning a process to run an executable
    • 1-110
      Chapter 16: Exception handling
    • 1-111
      Section 16.1: Handling Exception In Node.Js
    • 1-112
      Section 16.2: Unhanded Exception Management
    • 1-113
      Section 16.3: Errors and Promises
    • 1-114
      Chapter 17: Keep a node application constantly running
    • 1-115
      Section 17.1: Use PM2 as a process manager
    • 1-116
      Section 17.2: Running and stopping a Forever daemon
    • 1-117
      Section 17.3: Continuous running with nohup
    • 1-118
      Chapter 18: Uninstalling Node.js
    • 1-119
      Section 18.1: Completely uninstall Node.js on Mac OSX
    • 1-120
      Section 18.2: Uninstall Node.js on Windows
    • 1-121
      Chapter 19: nvm - Node Version Manager
    • 1-122
      Section 19.1: Install NVM
    • 1-123
      Section 19.2: Check NVM version
    • 1-124
      Section 19.3: Installing an specific Node version
    • 1-125
      Section 19.4: Using an already installed node version
    • 1-126
      Section 19.5: Install nvm on Mac OSX
    • 1-127
      Section 19.6: Run any arbitrary command in a subshell with the desired version of node
    • 1-128
      Section 19.7: Setting alias for node version
    • 1-129
      Chapter 20: http
    • 1-130
      Section 20.1: http server
    • 1-131
      Section 20.2: http client
    • 1-132
      Chapter 21: Using Streams
    • 1-133
      Section 21.1: Read Data from TextFile with Streams
    • 1-134
      Section 21.2: Piping streams
    • 1-135
      Section 21.3: Creating your own readable/writable stream
    • 1-136
      Section 21.4: Why Streams?
    • 1-137
      Chapter 22: Deploying Node.js applications in production
    • 1-138
      Section 22.1: Setting NODE_ENV="production"
    • 1-139
      Section 22.2: Manage app with process manager
    • 1-140
      Section 22.3: Deployment using process manager
    • 1-141
      Section 22.4: Deployment using PM2
    • 1-142
      Section 22.5: Using dierent Properties/Configuration for dierent environments like dev, qa, staging etc
    • 1-143
      Section 22.6: Taking advantage of clusters
    • 1-144
      Chapter 23: Securing Node.js applications
    • 1-145
      Section 23.1: SSL/TLS in Node.js
    • 1-146
      Section 23.2: Preventing Cross Site Request Forgery (CSRF)
    • 1-147
      Section 23.3: Setting up an HTTPS server
    • 1-148
      Section 23.4: Using HTTPS
    • 1-149
      Section 23.5: Secure express.js 3 Application
    • 1-150
      Chapter 24: Mongoose Library
    • 1-151
      Section 24.1: Connect to MongoDB Using Mongoose
    • 1-152
      Section 24.2: Find Data in MongoDB Using Mongoose, Express.js Routes and $text Operator
    • 1-153
      Section 24.3: Save Data to MongoDB using Mongoose and Express.js Routes
    • 1-154
      Section 24.4: Find Data in MongoDB Using Mongoose and Express.js Routes
    • 1-155
      Section 24.5: Useful Mongoose functions
    • 1-156
      Section 24.6: Indexes in models
    • 1-157
      Section 24.7: find data in mongodb using promises
    • 1-158
      Chapter 25: async.js
    • 1-159
      Section 25.1: Parallel : multi-tasking
    • 1-160
      Section 25.2: async.each(To handle array of data eciently)
    • 1-161
      Section 25.3: Series : independent mono-tasking
    • 1-162
      Section 25.4: Waterfall : dependent mono-tasking
    • 1-163
      Section 25.5: async.times(To handle for loop in better way)
    • 1-164
      Section 25.6: async.series(To handle events one by one)
    • 1-165
      Chapter 26: File upload
    • 1-166
      Section 26.1: Single File Upload using multer
    • 1-167
      Section 26.2: Using formidable module
    • 1-168
      Chapter 27: Socket.io communication
    • 1-169
      Section 27.1: "Hello world!" with socket messages
    • 1-170
      Chapter 28: Mongodb integration
    • 1-171
      Section 28.1: Simple connect
    • 1-172
      Section 28.2: Simple connect, using promises
    • 1-173
      Section 28.3: Connect to MongoDB
    • 1-174
      Section 28.4: Insert a document
    • 1-175
      Section 28.5: Read a collection
    • 1-176
      Section 28.6: Update a document
    • 1-177
      Section 28.7: Delete a document
    • 1-178
      Section 28.8: Delete multiple documents
    • 1-179
      Chapter 29: Handling POST request in Node.js
    • 1-180
      Section 29.1: Sample node.js server that just handles POST requests
    • 1-181
      Chapter 30: Simple REST based CRUD API
    • 1-182
      Section 30.1: REST API for CRUD in Express 3+
    • 1-183
      Chapter 31: Template frameworks
    • 1-184
      Section 31.1: Nunjucks
    • 1-185
      Chapter 32: Node.js Architecture & Inner Workings
    • 1-186
      Section 32.1: Node.js - under the hood
    • 1-187
      Section 32.2: Node.js - in motion
    • 1-188
      Chapter 33: Debugging Node.js application
    • 1-189
      Section 33.1: Core node.js debugger and node inspector
    • 1-190
      Chapter 34: Node server without framework
    • 1-191
      Section 34.1: Framework-less node server
    • 1-192
      Section 34.2: Overcoming CORS Issues
    • 1-193
      Chapter 35: Node.JS with ES6
    • 1-194
      Section 35.1: Node ES6 Support and creating a project with Babel
    • 1-195
      Section 35.2: Use JS es6 on your NodeJS app
    • 1-196
      Chapter 36: Interacting with Console
    • 1-197
      Section 36.1: Logging
    • 1-198
      Chapter 37: Cassandra Integration
    • 1-199
      Section 37.1: Hello world
    • 1-200
      Chapter 38: Creating API's with Node.js
    • 1-201
      Section 38.1: GET api using Express
    • 1-202
      Section 38.2: POST api using Express
    • 1-203
      Chapter 39: Graceful Shutdown
    • 1-204
      Section 39.1: Graceful Shutdown - SIGTERM
    • 1-205
      Chapter 40: Using IISNode to host Node.js Web Apps in IIS
    • 1-206
      Section 40.1: Using an IIS Virtual Directory or Nested Application via <appSettings>
    • 1-207
      Section 40.2: Getting Started
    • 1-208
      Section 40.3: Basic Hello World Example using Express
    • 1-209
      Section 40.4: Using Socket.io with IISNode
    • 1-210
      Chapter 41: CLI
    • 1-211
      Section 41.1: Command Line Options
    • 1-212
      Chapter 42: NodeJS Frameworks
    • 1-213
      Section 42.1: Web Server Frameworks
    • 1-214
      Section 42.2: Command Line Interface Frameworks
    • 1-215
      Chapter 43: grunt
    • 1-216
      Section 43.1: Introduction To GruntJs
    • 1-217
      Section 43.2: Installing gruntplugins
    • 1-218
      Chapter 44: Using WebSocket's with Node.JS
    • 1-219
      Section 44.1: Installing WebSocket's
    • 1-220
      Section 44.2: Adding WebSocket's to your file's
    • 1-221
      Section 44.3: Using WebSocket's and WebSocket Server's
    • 1-222
      Section 44.4: A Simple WebSocket Server Example
    • 1-223
      Chapter 45: metalsmith
    • 1-224
      Section 45.1: Build a simple blog
    • 1-225
      {{ title }}
    • 1-226
      Chapter 46: Parsing command line arguments
    • 1-227
      Section 46.1: Passing action (verb) and values
    • 1-228
      Section 46.2: Passing boolean switches
    • 1-229
      Chapter 47: Client-server communication
    • 1-230
      Section 47.1: /w Express, jQuery and Jade
    • 1-231
      Chapter 48: Node.js Design Fundamental
    • 1-232
      Section 48.1: The Node.js philosophy
    • 1-233
      Chapter 49: Connect to Mongodb
    • 1-234
      Section 49.1: Simple example to Connect mongoDB from Node.JS
    • 1-235
      Section 49.2: Simple way to Connect mongoDB with core Node.JS
    • 1-236
      Chapter 50: Performance challenges
    • 1-237
      Section 50.1: Processing long running queries with Node
    • 1-238
      Chapter 51: Send Web Notification
    • 1-239
      Section 51.1: Send Web notification using GCM ( Google Cloud Messaging System)
    • 1-240
      Chapter 52: Remote Debugging in Node.JS
    • 1-241
      Section 52.1: Use the proxy for debugging via port on Linux
    • 1-242
      Section 52.2: NodeJS run configuration
    • 1-243
      Section 52.3: IntelliJ/Webstorm Configuration
    • 1-244
      Chapter 53: Database (MongoDB with Mongoose)
    • 1-245
      Section 53.1: Mongoose connection
    • 1-246
      Section 53.2: Model
    • 1-247
      Section 53.3: Insert data
    • 1-248
      Section 53.4: Read data
    • 1-249
      Chapter 54: Good coding style
    • 1-250
      Section 54.1: Basic program for signup
    • 1-251
      Chapter 55: Restful API Design: Best Practices
    • 1-252
      Section 55.1: Error Handling: GET all resources
    • 1-253
      Chapter 56: Deliver HTML or any other sort of file
    • 1-254
      Section 56.1: Deliver HTML at specified path
    • 1-255
      Chapter 57: TCP Sockets
    • 1-256
      Section 57.1: A simple TCP server
    • 1-257
      Section 57.2: A simple TCP client
    • 1-258
      Chapter 58: Hack
    • 1-259
      Section 58.1: Add new extensions to require()
    • 1-260
      Chapter 59: Bluebird Promises
    • 1-261
      Section 59.1: Converting nodeback library to Promises
    • 1-262
      Section 59.2: Functional Promises
    • 1-263
      Section 59.3: Coroutines (Generators)
    • 1-264
      Section 59.4: Automatic Resource Disposal (Promise.using)
    • 1-265
      Section 59.5: Executing in series
    • 1-266
      Chapter 60: Async/Await
    • 1-267
      Section 60.1: Comparison between Promises and Async/Await
    • 1-268
      Section 60.2: Async Functions with Try-Catch Error Handling
    • 1-269
      Section 60.3: Stops execution at await
    • 1-270
      Section 60.4: Progression from Callbacks
    • 1-271
      Chapter 61: Koa Framework v2
    • 1-272
      Section 61.1: Hello World example
    • 1-273
      Section 61.2: Handling errors using middleware
    • 1-274
      Chapter 62: Unit testing frameworks
    • 1-275
      Section 62.1: Mocha Asynchronous (async/await)
    • 1-276
      Section 62.2: Mocha synchronous
    • 1-277
      Section 62.3: Mocha asynchronous (callback)
    • 1-278
      Chapter 63: ECMAScript 2015 (ES6) with Node.js
    • 1-279
      Section 63.1: const/let declarations
    • 1-280
      Section 63.2: Arrow functions
    • 1-281
      Section 63.3: Arrow Function Example
    • 1-282
      Section 63.4: destructuring
    • 1-283
      Section 63.5: flow
    • 1-284
      Section 63.6: ES6 Class
    • 1-285
      Chapter 64: Routing AJAX requests with Express.JS
    • 1-286
      Section 64.1: A simple implementation of AJAX
    • 1-287
      Chapter 65: Sending a file stream to client
    • 1-288
      Section 65.1: Using fs And pipe To Stream Static Files From The Server
    • 1-289
      Section 65.2: Streaming Using fluent-mpeg
    • 1-290
      Chapter 66: NodeJS with Redis
    • 1-291
      Section 66.1: Getting Started
    • 1-292
      Section 66.2: Storing Key-Value Pairs
    • 1-293
      Section 66.3: Some more important operations supported by node_redis
    • 1-294
      Chapter 67: Using Browserfiy to resolve 'required' error with browsers
    • 1-295
      Section 67.1: Example - file.js
    • 1-296
      Chapter 68: Node.JS and MongoDB.
    • 1-297
      Section 68.1: Connecting To a Database
    • 1-298
      Section 68.2: Creating New Collection
    • 1-299
      Section 68.3: Inserting Documents
    • 1-300
      Section 68.4: Reading
    • 1-301
      Section 68.5: Updating
    • 1-302
      Section 68.6: Deleting
    • 1-303
      Chapter 69: Passport integration
    • 1-304
      Section 69.1: Local authentication
    • 1-305
      Section 69.2: Getting started
    • 1-306
      Section 69.3: Facebook authentication
    • 1-307
      Section 69.4: Simple Username-Password Authentication
    • 1-308
      Section 69.5: Google Passport authentication
    • 1-309
      Chapter 70: Dependency Injection
    • 1-310
      Section 70.1: Why Use Dependency Injection
    • 1-311
      Chapter 71: NodeJS Beginner Guide
    • 1-312
      Section 71.1: Hello World !
    • 1-313
      Chapter 72: Use Cases of Node.js
    • 1-314
      Section 72.1: HTTP server
    • 1-315
      Section 72.2: Console with command prompt
    • 1-316
      Chapter 73: Sequelize.js
    • 1-317
      Section 73.1: Defining Models
    • 1-318
      Section 73.2: Installation
    • 1-319
      Chapter 74: PostgreSQL integration
    • 1-320
      Section 74.1: Connect To PostgreSQL
    • 1-321
      Section 74.2: Query with Connection Object
    • 1-322
      Chapter 75: MySQL integration
    • 1-323
      Section 75.1: Connect to MySQL
    • 1-324
      Section 75.2: Using a connection pool
    • 1-325
      Section 75.3: Query a connection object with parameters
    • 1-326
      Section 75.4: Query a connection object without parameters
    • 1-327
      Section 75.5: Run a number of queries with a single connection from a pool
    • 1-328
      Section 75.6: Export Connection Pool
    • 1-329
      Section 75.7: Return the query when an error occurs
    • 1-330
      Chapter 76: MySQL Connection Pool
    • 1-331
      Section 76.1: Using a connection pool without database
    • 1-332
      Chapter 77: MSSQL Intergration
    • 1-333
      Section 77.1: Connecting with SQL via. mssql npm module
    • 1-334
      Chapter 78: Node.js with Oracle
    • 1-335
      Section 78.1: Connect to Oracle DB
    • 1-336
      Section 78.2: Using a local module for easier querying
    • 1-337
      Section 78.3: Query a connection object without parameters
    • 1-338
      Chapter 79: Synchronous vs Asynchronous programming in nodejs
    • 1-339
      Section 79.1: Using async
    • 1-340
      Chapter 80: Node.js Error Management
    • 1-341
      Section 80.1: try...catch block
    • 1-342
      Section 80.2: Creating Error object
    • 1-343
      Section 80.3: Throwing Error
    • 1-344
      Chapter 81: Node.js v6 New Features and Improvement
    • 1-345
      Section 81.1: Default Function Parameters
    • 1-346
      Section 81.2: Rest Parameters
    • 1-347
      Section 81.3: Arrow Functions
    • 1-348
      Section 81.4: "this" in Arrow Function
    • 1-349
      Section 81.5: Spread Operator
    • 1-350
      Chapter 82: Eventloop
    • 1-351
      Section 82.1: How the concept of event loop evolved
    • 1-352
      Chapter 83: Nodejs History
    • 1-353
      Section 83.1: Key events in each year
    • 1-354
      Chapter 84: passport.js
    • 1-355
      Section 84.1: Example of LocalStrategy in passport.js
    • 1-356
      Chapter 85: Asynchronous programming
    • 1-357
      Section 85.1: Callback functions
    • 1-358
      Section 85.2: Callback hell
    • 1-359
      Section 85.3: Native Promises
    • 1-360
      Section 85.4: Code example
    • 1-361
      Section 85.5: Async error handling
    • 1-362
      Chapter 86: Node.js code for STDIN and STDOUT without using any library
    • 1-363
      Section 86.1: Program
    • 1-364
      Chapter 87: MongoDB Integration for Node.js/Express.js
    • 1-365
      Section 87.1: Installing MongoDB
    • 1-366
      Section 87.2: Creating a Mongoose Model
    • 1-367
      Section 87.3: Querying your Mongo Database
    • 1-368
      Chapter 88: Lodash
    • 1-369
      Section 88.1: Filter a collection
    • 1-370
      Chapter 89: csv parser in node js
    • 1-371
      Section 89.1: Using FS to read in a CSV
    • 1-372
      Chapter 90: Loopback - REST Based connector
    • 1-373
      Section 90.1: Adding a web based connector
    • 1-374
      Chapter 91: Running node.js as a service
    • 1-375
      Section 91.1: Node.js as a systemd dæmon
    • 1-376
      Chapter 92: Node.js with CORS
    • 1-377
      Section 92.1: Enable CORS in express.js
    • 1-378
      Chapter 93: Getting started with Nodes profiling
    • 1-379
      Section 93.1: Profiling a simple node application
    • 1-380
      Chapter 94: Node.js Performance
    • 1-381
      Section 94.1: Enable gzip
    • 1-382
      Section 94.2: Event Loop
    • 1-383
      Section 94.3: Increase maxSockets
    • 1-384
      Chapter 95: Yarn Package Manager
    • 1-385
      Section 95.1: Creating a basic package
    • 1-386
      Section 95.2: Yarn Installation
    • 1-387
      Section 95.3: Install package with Yarn
    • 1-388
      Chapter 96: OAuth 2.0
    • 1-389
      Section 96.1: OAuth 2 with Redis Implementation - grant_type: password
    • 1-390
      Chapter 97: Node JS Localization
    • 1-391
      Section 97.1: using i18n module to maintains localization in node js app
    • 1-392
      Chapter 98: Deploying Node.js application without downtime.
    • 1-393
      Section 98.1: Deployment using PM2 without downtime
    • 1-394
      Chapter 99: Node.js (express.js) with angular.js Sample code
    • 1-395
      Section 99.1: Creating our project
    • 1-396
      Chapter 100: NodeJs Routing
    • 1-397
      Section 100.1: Express Web Server Routing
    • 1-398
      Chapter 101: Creating a Node.js Library that Supports Both Promises and Error-First Callbacks
    • 1-399
      Section 101.1: Example Module and Corresponding Program using Bluebird
    • 1-400
      Chapter 102: Project Structure
    • 1-401
      Section 102.1: A simple nodejs application with MVC and API
    • 1-402
      Chapter 103: Avoid callback hell
    • 1-403
      Section 103.1: Async module
    • 1-404
      Section 103.2: Async Module
    • 1-405
      Chapter 104: Arduino communication with nodeJs
    • 1-406
      Section 104.1: Node Js communication with Arduino via serialport
    • 1-407
      Chapter 105: N-API
    • 1-408
      Section 105.1: Hello to N-API
    • 1-409
      Chapter 106: Multithreading
    • 1-410
      Section 106.1: Cluster
    • 1-411
      Section 106.2: Child Process
    • 1-412
      Chapter 107: Windows authentication under node.js
    • 1-413
      Section 107.1: Using activedirectory
    • 1-414
      Chapter 108: Require()
    • 1-415
      Section 108.1: Beginning require() use with a function and file
    • 1-416
      Section 108.2: Beginning require() use with an NPM package
    • 1-417
      Chapter 109: Route-Controller-Service structure for ExpressJS
    • 1-418
      Section 109.1: Model-Routes-Controllers-Services Directory Structure
    • 1-419
      Section 109.2: Model-Routes-Controllers-Services Code Structure
    • 1-420
      Chapter 110: Push notifications
    • 1-421
      Section 110.1: Web notification
    • 1-422
      Section 110.2: Apple
    • 1-423
      Appendix A: Installing Node.js
    • 1-424
      Section A.1: Using Node Version Manager (nvm)
    • 1-425
      Section A.2: Installing Node.js on Mac using package manager
    • 1-426
      Section A.3: Installing Node.js on Windows
    • 1-427
      Section A.4: Install Node.js on Ubuntu
    • 1-428
      Section A.5: Installing Node.js with n
    • 1-429
      Section A.6: Install Node.js From Source with APT package manager
    • 1-430
      Section A.7: Install Node.js from source on Centos, RHEL and Fedora
    • 1-431
      Section A.8: Installing with Node Version Manager under Fish Shell with Oh My Fish!
    • 1-432
      Section A.9: Installing Node.js on Raspberry PI
    • 1-433
      Credits
    • 1-434
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