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Node.js for Beginners

You're reading from   Node.js for Beginners A comprehensive guide to building efficient, full-featured web applications with Node.js

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803245171
Length 382 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Ulises Gascón Ulises Gascón
Author Profile Icon Ulises Gascón
Ulises Gascón
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Toc

Table of Contents (25) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Node.js Overview and JavaScript Language FREE CHAPTER
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to Node.js 3. Chapter 2: Setting Up the Development Environment 4. Chapter 3: JavaScript Fundamentals 5. Chapter 4: Asynchronous Programming 6. Part 2: Node.js Ecosystem and Architecture
7. Chapter 5: Node.js Core Libraries 8. Chapter 6: External Modules and npm 9. Chapter 7: Event-Driven Architecture 10. Chapter 8: Testing in Node.js 11. Part 3: Web Application Fundamentals
12. Chapter 9: Handling HTTP and REST APIs 13. Chapter 10: Building Web Applications with Express 14. Part 4: Building Solid Web Applications with Node.js
15. Chapter 11: Building a Web Application Project from Scratch 16. Chapter 12: Data Persistence with MongoDB 17. Chapter 13: User Authentication and Authorization with Passport.js 18. Chapter 14: Error Handling in Node.js 19. Chapter 15: Securing Web Applications 20. Part 5: Mastering Node.js Deployment and Portability
21. Chapter 16: Deploying Node.js Applications 22. Chapter 17: Dockerizing a Node.js Application 23. Index 24. Other Books You May Enjoy

Summary

In this chapter, we learned how MongoDB is different from other databases. We learned how to install MongoDB locally using containers, with Docker and Docker Compose.

Additionally, we explored how we can manage sensitive information in our application using environment variables and the dotenv package. We also learned how to use Mongoose to interact with MongoDB.

Finally, we migrated our application to use MongoDB instead of a JSON file. This gave us the opportunity to properly learn how to refactor and reorganize our previous code. This migration also made it easy to maintain and deploy the application, as data is stored and queried as an external source. This will help us to scale a lot in the future, as we can connect multiple replicas of our backend to the same database instance. We also learned how to test our application using MongoDB, and we used this testing approach to ensure that the migration was completed successfully.

In the next chapter, we will introduce...

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