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Node.js Blueprints

You're reading from   Node.js Blueprints Develop stunning web and desktop applications with the definitive Node.js

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783287338
Length 268 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Krasimir Stefanov Tsonev Krasimir Stefanov Tsonev
Author Profile Icon Krasimir Stefanov Tsonev
Krasimir Stefanov Tsonev
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Common Programming Paradigms FREE CHAPTER 2. Developing a Basic Site with Node.js and Express 3. Writing a Blog Application with Node.js and AngularJS 4. Developing a Chat with Socket.IO 5. Creating a To-do Application with Backbone.js 6. Using Node.js as a Command-line Tool 7. Showing a Social Feed with Ember.js 8. Developing Web App Workflow with Grunt and Gulp 9. Automate Your Testing with Node.js 10. Writing Flexible and Modular CSS 11. Writing a REST API 12. Developing Desktop Apps with Node.js Index

Extending the application

Our file browser looks good so far. We can see the folders and files on our machine and can copy, move, or delete them. Also, we did all this with only HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. Let's continue and add a new feature. The application we wrote is run by Chromium. In other words, our HTML and CSS are rendered by the browser, so we can easily show images in it. In the next few pages, we will create a program picture viewer.

Tweaking the updateFileArea function

The first thing to do is find out whether the currently selected file is an image. We will display the JPEG and PNG files, so we should check whether the file matches one of these extensions. Before populating the html variable with the markup, we will extract the file's extension as it is done in the code below:

var updateFileArea = function(itemPath) {
  var html = '';
  api.csf = itemPath;
  if(itemPath) {
    fs.stat(itemPath, function(err, stat) {
      var ext = path.extname(itemPath).toLowerCase...
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