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Learning Node.js for .NET  Developers

You're reading from   Learning Node.js for .NET Developers Build server side applications with Node.js

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785280092
Length 248 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Mark Vasilkov Mark Vasilkov
Author Profile Icon Mark Vasilkov
Mark Vasilkov
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Why Node.js? FREE CHAPTER 2. Getting Started with Node.js 3. A JavaScript Primer 4. Introducing Node.js Modules 5. Creating Dynamic Websites 6. Testing Node.js Applications 7. Setting up an Automated Build 8. Mastering Asynchronicity 9. Persisting Data 10. Creating Real-time Web Apps 11. Deploying Node.js Applications 12. Authentication in Node.js 13. Creating JavaScript Packages 14. Node.js and Beyond Index

Understanding Node.js versioning

As mentioned in Chapter 1, Why Node.js?, the release of Node.js v4 in 2015 shows the platform coming to maturity. If you've used Node.js before the end of 2015, you would have seen version numbers such as v0.8.0 or v0.12.0. So why the leap to v4.0.0?

A brief history of Node.js

Node.js is an open-source project with a corporate sponsor, Joyent. This means that a single company has a lot of influence over the direction of Node.js, but anyone can create their own fork of the source code. This is exactly what happened at the end of 2014. A group of major contributors to Node.js split the project to create a new fork, named io.js. A few key properties of io.js were:

  • A more open governance model
  • A more regular release cycle, keeping more up-to-date with the underlying V8 engine, to take advantage of performance improvements and newer JavaScript language features
  • A move to semantic versioning (see http://semver.org/), resulting in major version numbers increasing...
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