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Web Development with MongoDB and NodeJS Second edition

You're reading from   Web Development with MongoDB and NodeJS Second edition Build an interactive and full-featured web application from scratch using Node.js and MongoDB

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785287527
Length 300 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Welcome to JavaScript in the Full Stack FREE CHAPTER 2. Getting Up and Running 3. Node and MongoDB Basics 4. Introducing Express 5. Templating with Handlebars 6. Controllers and View Models 7. Persisting Data with MongoDB 8. Creating a RESTful API 9. Testing Your Code 10. Deploying with Cloud-Based Services 11. Single-Page Applications with Popular Frontend Frameworks 12. Popular Node.js Web Frameworks Index

View models


Given a single HTML view in our app, we need to be able to attach data to that page so that the template that is being rendered can be included in such a way that the dynamic areas of the page are replaced with real content. To do this, we need to generate a view model. During the render, the template engine will parse the template itself and look for special syntax that indicates that specific sections should be replaced at runtime with values from the view model itself. We have seen examples of this while we explored the Handlebars template framework in the previous chapter. Think of this as a fancy runtime find and replace of your HTML templates—finding variables and replacing them with values stored in the view model sent to the template. It is important to note that this process happens at the server and the result is only sent as the response to the HTTP request that our application receives.

A view model is typically just a single JavaScript object that can be passed to...

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