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Web Developer's Reference Guide

You're reading from   Web Developer's Reference Guide A one-stop guide to the essentials of web development including popular frameworks such as jQuery, Bootstrap, AngularJS, and Node.js

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783552139
Length 838 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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 Johanan Johanan
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Johanan
 Khan Khan
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Khan
 Zea Zea
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Zea
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. HTML Elements 2. HTML Attributes FREE CHAPTER 3. CSS Concepts and Applications 4. CSS Properties – Part 1 5. CSS Properties – Part 2 6. CSS Properties – Part 3 7. CSS Functions 8. JavaScript Implementations, Syntax Basics, and Variable Types 9. JavaScript Expressions, Operators, Statements, and Arrays 10. JavaScript Object-Oriented Programming 11. Extending JavaScript and ECMAScript 6 12. Server-side JavaScript – NodeJS 13. Bootstrap – The Stylish CSS Frontend Framework 14. jQuery – The Popular JavaScript Library 15. AngularJS – Google's In-Demand Framework Index

The HTTP module

We will cover the HTTP server module. Technically, you could write your HTTP server using the net module, but you do not have to.

Some of these functions are very similar to the net module functions. This should make sense as HTTP, at its core, is a network server.

All of these functions and objects are also used with the HTTPS module. The only difference is that for the options of createServer and https.request, you can pass certificates.

All of the following examples assume that the module has been loaded:

var http = require('http');

createServer

This creates an HTTP server:

http.createServer([requestListener])

Return Value

This returns an http.Server object.

Description

Much like net.createServer, this is required to serve anything. The requestListener parameter is attached to the request event.

Here is a simple example that just logs to the console any time a request is made:

var server = http.createServer(function (req, res) {
    console.log('Someone made a request...
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