116 lines
3.2 KiB
Plaintext
116 lines
3.2 KiB
Plaintext
= Node.js =
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Node.js is an Asynchronus, event driven javascript runtime. On line the command
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is `node`.
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== Hello World ==
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1) Create a file called `index.js`. This is always the entry point (similar to
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a main()).
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2) Place code. It is interpreted the same as if it were in the browser. For
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example,
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{{{
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console.log("hello world")
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}}}
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== Modules Available ==
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All modules are included by using the `require('MODULE')` syntax
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== Events ==
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Events are times when certain things happen. We can do things on those events
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by using a callback. This is accessed via the process object. For example,
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{{{
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process.on('exit', function() {
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Console.log("Goodbye!");
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});
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}}}
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Will print goodbye to the console when the program terminates. process.on takes
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two paramaters, the event name '`exit`', and the function (or lambda).
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To create an event, we can use the Event Emitter, a node.js builtin. The
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following example is an annotated example of exactly that.
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{{{
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//pull in the event emitter dependency
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const { EventEmitter } = require('events');
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//create the event emitter
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const eventEmitter = new EventEmitter();
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//create the callback 'lunch'
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eventEmitter.on('lunch', function() {
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console.log("Lunch time");
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});
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//trigger the callback function
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eventEmitter.emit('lunch');
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}}}
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As you can see, this is a similar concept to something like function pointers,
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where a pointer is assigned then later called through the pointer.
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== File system ==
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The file system can be read in two modes, either in a block or non blocking
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mode (similar to async calls in C#)
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Below is an example of exactly that. The 'Sync' calls are ones that are done in
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a blocking manner
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{{{
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//import read file
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const { readFile, readFileSync } = require('fs');
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//read the file, blocking
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const txt = readFileSync('./sample.txt', 'utf8');
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console.log(txt);
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//or read the file on a seperate thread
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//the third argument is the file name, encoding, then the function (which gets
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//passed both the error object, and the contents of the file)
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readFile('./sample.txt', 'utf8', (err, txt) => {
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//stuff to do after we get the file
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console.log(txt)
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});
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console.log('this is called after the fact');
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}}}
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== Packages ==
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Node.js's package manager is npm. It can download packages for you to use in
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your project. To start using npm in a project, run `npm init -y` to setup a
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package.json file, which is how npm keeps track of files it needs. Now to
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install a framework (for example, express), run `npm install express`, and
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thats all that is needed
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To include a package (which includes the several built in packages), use the
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`require()` syntax, and pass it a string argument of the name of the module.
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This system is how you can use several files on one project. To include a
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module called 'my-module', you first create a my-module.js file, the add this
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to the top of your code
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{{{
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const myModule = require('./my-module');
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console.log(myModule);
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}}}
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Then in the module file you must export code from it. In the module file, add
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the following
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{{{
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module.exports = {
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myvar : 'some value'
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}
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}}}
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Now myModule.myvar will return 'some value'. You can use functions and the like
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here to make easy to import functionality.
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