Express.js: Difference between revisions

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==Libraries==
==Libraries==
* [https://www.npmjs.com/package/express-ws express-ws] adds websocket endpoints for express.
Some common libraries and middleware
 
* [https://www.npmjs.com/package/express-rate-limit express-rate-limit] adds rate limiting.
* [https://expressjs.com/en/resources/middleware/csurf.html csrf] adds csrf protection.


==Resources==
==Resources==

Revision as of 14:45, 3 September 2020

Express.js, also known as Express, is a Node.js web-framework.
It provides access to routing and a rich community of middleware.

The benefit to using JS/TS for your backend is that your full stack is in a single-language.
This also means you can use all of your favorite libraries on npm.

However, since JS is single-threaded, you need to be careful with optimization (i.e. async programming).
Deployment may require running multiple instances of your application even on the same VM.

Getting Started

To create a project, do

npx express-generator --view=pug

or

npm i -g express-generator
express --view=pug [dir]

See express starter generator for more details.

  • By default, express uses jade for its template engine. This has been replaced by pug.
  • If you want to make a typescript project, you can also try express-generator-typescript.
    • This is made by a third-party and includes some extra libraries.

Usage

Routing

See Guide: Routing

Database

See Express database integration

Express does not provide any special methods for interacting with databases.

Below are some ways of interacting with databases.

  • Sequelize is an object-relation mapping (ORM) for Node. It supports Postgres, MySQL, MariaDB, SQLite, and Microsoft SQL Server.
  • TypeORM is another ORM from Node.
  • Knex.js is an SQL query builder.
  • Objection.js is another ORM built on Knex.js.

Libraries

Some common libraries and middleware

Resources