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Node.js Design Patterns - Third Edition

You're reading from  Node.js Design Patterns - Third Edition

Product type Book
Published in Jul 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839214110
Pages 664 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Languages
Authors (2):
Mario Casciaro Mario Casciaro
Profile icon Mario Casciaro
Luciano Mammino Luciano Mammino
Profile icon Luciano Mammino
View More author details

Table of Contents (16) Chapters

Preface 1. The Node.js Platform 2. The Module System 3. Callbacks and Events 4. Asynchronous Control Flow Patterns with Callbacks 5. Asynchronous Control Flow Patterns with Promises and Async/Await 6. Coding with Streams 7. Creational Design Patterns 8. Structural Design Patterns 9. Behavioral Design Patterns 10. Universal JavaScript for Web Applications 11. Advanced Recipes 12. Scalability and Architectural Patterns 13. Messaging and Integration Patterns 14. Other Books You May Enjoy
15. Index

The module system and its patterns

As we said, modules are the bricks for structuring non-trivial applications and the main mechanism to enforce information hiding by keeping private all the functions and variables that are not explicitly marked to be exported.

Before getting into the specifics of CommonJS, let's discuss a generic pattern that helps with information hiding and that we will be using for building a simple module system, which is the revealing module pattern.

The revealing module pattern

One of the bigger problems with JavaScript in the browser is the lack of namespacing. Every script runs in the global scope; therefore, internal application code or third-party dependencies can pollute the scope while exposing their own pieces of functionality. This can be extremely harmful. Imagine, for instance, that a third-party library instantiates a global variable called utils. If any other library, or the application code itself, accidentally overrides or alters utils, the code that relies on it will likely crash in some unpredictable way. Unpredictable side effects can also happen if other libraries or the application code accidentally invoke a function of another library meant for internal use only.

In short, relying on the global scope is a very risky business, especially as your application grows and you have to rely more and more on functionality implemented by other individuals.

A popular technique to solve this class of problems is called the revealing module pattern, and it looks like this:

const myModule = (() => {
  const privateFoo = () => {}
  const privateBar = []
  const exported = {
    publicFoo: () => {},
    publicBar: () => {}
  }
  return exported
})() // once the parenthesis here are parsed, the function
     // will be invoked
console.log(myModule)
console.log(myModule.privateFoo, myModule.privateBar)

This pattern leverages a self-invoking function. This type of function is sometimes also referred to as Immediately Invoked Function Expression (IIFE) and it is used to create a private scope, exporting only the parts that are meant to be public.

In JavaScript, variables created inside a function are not accessible from the outer scope (outside the function). Functions can use the return statement to selectively propagate information to the outer scope.

This pattern is essentially exploiting these properties to keep the private information hidden and export only a public-facing API.

In the preceding code, the myModule variable contains only the exported API, while the rest of the module content is practically inaccessible from outside.

The log statement is going to print something like this:

{ publicFoo: [Function: publicFoo],
  publicBar: [Function: publicBar] }
undefined undefined

This demonstrates that only the exported properties are directly accessible from myModule.

As we will see in a moment, the idea behind this pattern is used as a base for the CommonJS module system.

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