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Node.js Web Development

You're reading from   Node.js Web Development Create real-time server-side applications with this practical, step-by-step guide

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785881503
Length 376 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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David Herron David Herron
Author Profile Icon David Herron
David Herron
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. About Node.js FREE CHAPTER 2. Setting up Node.js 3. Node.js Modules 4. HTTP Servers and Clients – A Web Application's First Steps 5. Your First Express Application 6. Implementing the Mobile-First Paradigm 7. Data Storage and Retrieval 8. Multiuser Authentication the Microservice Way 9. Dynamic Interaction between Client and Server with Socket.IO 10. Deploying Node.js Applications 11. Unit Testing Index

Sending and receiving events with EventEmitters

EventEmitters are one of the core idioms of Node.js. Many of the core modules are EventEmitters, and also EventEmitters make an excellent skeleton to implement asynchronous programming. EventEmitters have nothing to do with web application development, but they are so much part of the woodwork that you may skip over their existence. It is with the HTTP classes that we will get our first taste of EventEmitters.

In this chapter, we'll work with the HTTPServer and HTTPClient objects. Both of them are subclasses of EventEmitter and rely on it to send events for each step of the HTTP protocol. Understanding EventEmitter will help you understand not only these objects but many other objects in Node.js.

The EventEmitter object is defined in the events module of Node.js. Directly using the EventEmitter class means performing require('events'). In most cases, you won't require this module, but there are cases where the program needs...

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