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Node Cookbook: Second Edition

You're reading from   Node Cookbook: Second Edition Transferring your JavaScript skills to server-side programming is simplified with this comprehensive cookbook. Each chapter focuses on a different aspect of Node, featuring recipes supported with lots of illustrations, tips, and hints.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2014
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783280438
Length 378 pages
Edition Edition
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Author (1):
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David Mark Clements David Mark Clements
Author Profile Icon David Mark Clements
David Mark Clements
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Node Cookbook Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Making a Web Server FREE CHAPTER 2. Exploring the HTTP Object 3. Working with Data Serialization 4. Interfacing with Databases 5. Employing Streams 6. Going Real Time 7. Accelerating Development with Express 8. Implementing Security, Encryption, and Authentication 9. Integrating Network Paradigms 10. Writing Your Own Node Modules 11. Taking It Live Index

Processing POST data


If we want to be able to receive POST data, we have to instruct our server how to accept and handle a POST request. In PHP, we could access our POST values seamlessly with $_POST['fieldname'], because it would block until an array value was filled. Contrariwise, Node provides low-level interaction with the flow of HTTP data, allowing us to interface with the incoming message body as a stream, leaving it entirely up to the developer to turn that stream into usable data

Getting ready

Let's create a server.js file ready for our code, and an HTML file called form.html, that contains the following:

<form method=post>
  <input type=text name=userinput1><br>
  <input type=text name=userinput2><br>
  <input type=submit>
</form>

For our purposes, we'll place form.html in the same folder as server.js. Though this is not generally a recommended practice, we should usually place our public code in a separate folder from our server code.

How to...

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