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Hands-on JavaScript for Python Developers

You're reading from  Hands-on JavaScript for Python Developers

Product type Book
Published in Sep 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838648121
Pages 410 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Author (1):
Sonyl Nagale Sonyl Nagale
Profile icon Sonyl Nagale

Table of Contents (26) Chapters

Preface 1. Section 1 - What is JavaScript? What is it not?
2. The Entrance of JavaScript into Mainstream Programming 3. Can We Use JavaScript Server-Side? Sure! 4. Nitty-Gritty Grammar 5. Data and Your Friend, JSON 6. Section 2 - Using JavaScript on the Front-End
7. Hello World! and Beyond: Your First Application 8. The Document Object Model (DOM) 9. Events, Event-Driven Design, and APIs 10. Working with Frameworks and Libraries 11. Deciphering Error Messages and Performance Leaks 12. JavaScript, Ruler of the Frontend 13. Section 3 - The Back-End: Node.js vs. Python
14. What Is Node.js? 15. Node.js versus Python 16. Using Express 17. React with Django 18. Combining Node.js with the Frontend 19. Enter Webpack 20. Section 4 - Communicating with Databases
21. Security and Keys 22. Node.js and MongoDB 23. Putting It All Together 24. Assessments 25. Other Books You May Enjoy

The scaffold: Using express-generator

To get started, we'll need to get on our command-line interface (CLI) again. If you remember Chapter 2, Can We Use JavaScript Server-Side? Sure!, we took a look at Node and npm on the command line. Let's check our version again so we can make a few decisions about our application. On your command line, run node -v. If you have v8.2.0 or greater, you have the option of using npx to install certain packages that are designed to be run only once in the lifespan of a project, such as express-generator. However, if you have a lower version, you can use npm to install one-time-use packages as well as packages that are used in your project.

We'll move forward with npx in this chapter, so if you need to take a quick look at the documentation for npm versus npx, be sure to give yourself some time to do that. In essence, to use npm for one-time packages that shouldn't live inside your code base, for example, a scaffolding tool such as an...

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