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Are there any good resources to get started with Node.JS? Any good tutorials, blogs or books?

Of course, I have visited its official website http://nodejs.org/, but I didn't think the documentation they have is a good starting point.

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3 Answers 3

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You can follow these tutorials to get started:

Tutorials

Developer Sites

Videos

Screencasts

Books

Courses

Blogs

Podcasts

JavaScript resources

Node.js Modules

Other

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  • 21
    Are the books ordered by your value in them or randomly? Looking to purchase a good reference manual on nodeJS's basics.
    – David
    May 17, 2011 at 15:11
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    @David: More or less randomly. First two are freely available and the last one is in preview mode. I would recommend to start with The Node Beginner.
    – yojimbo87
    May 17, 2011 at 15:18
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    My book (Node up and running) is available for free here: ofps.oreilly.com/titles/9781449398583 forever. It's also now an ebook and print.
    – sh1mmer
    May 20, 2012 at 19:36
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    Though I'm sure it took a lot of effort to compile this list, it would actually have been a lot more helpful to get no more than 3 of the best places (in your opinion) Nov 8, 2012 at 6:58
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    @sh1mmer: Dead link. This one works (same book): chimera.labs.oreilly.com/books/1234000001808/index.html
    – Nepoxx
    Dec 10, 2014 at 15:38
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+100

First, learn the core concepts of Node.js:

Then, you're going to want to see what the community has to offer:

The gold standard for Node.js package management is NPM.

Finally, you're going to want to know what some of the more popular packages are for various tasks:

Useful Tools for Every Project:

  • Underscore contains just about every core utility method you want.
  • Lo-Dash is a clone of Underscore that aims to be faster, more customizable, and has quite a few functions that underscore doesn't have. Certain versions of it can be used as drop-in replacements of underscore.
  • TypeScript makes JavaScript considerably more bearable, while also keeping you out of trouble!
  • JSHint is a code-checking tool that'll save you loads of time finding stupid errors. Find a plugin for your text editor that will automatically run it on your code.

Unit Testing:

  • Mocha is a popular test framework.
  • Vows is a fantastic take on asynchronous testing, albeit somewhat stale.
  • Expresso is a more traditional unit testing framework.
  • node-unit is another relatively traditional unit testing framework.
  • AVA is a new test runner with Babel built-in and runs tests concurrently.

Web Frameworks:

  • Express.js is by far the most popular framework.
  • Koa is a new web framework designed by the team behind Express.js, which aims to be a smaller, more expressive, and more robust foundation for web applications and APIs.
  • sails.js the most popular MVC framework for Node.js, and is based on express. It is designed to emulate the familiar MVC pattern of frameworks like Ruby on Rails, but with support for the requirements of modern apps: data-driven APIs with a scalable, service-oriented architecture.
  • Meteor bundles together jQuery, Handlebars, Node.js, WebSocket, MongoDB, and DDP and promotes convention over configuration without being a Ruby on Rails clone.
  • Tower (deprecated) is an abstraction of a top of Express.js that aims to be a Ruby on Rails clone.
  • Geddy is another take on web frameworks.
  • RailwayJS is a Ruby on Rails inspired MVC web framework.
  • Sleek.js is a simple web framework, built upon Express.js.
  • Hapi is a configuration-centric framework with built-in support for input validation, caching, authentication, etc.
  • Trails is a modern web application framework. It builds on the pedigree of Rails and Grails to accelerate development by adhering to a straightforward, convention-based, API-driven design philosophy.

  • Danf is a full-stack OOP framework providing many features in order to produce a scalable, maintainable, testable and performant applications and allowing to code the same way on both the server (Node.js) and client (browser) sides.

  • Derbyjs is a reactive full-stack JavaScript framework. They are using patterns like reactive programming and isomorphic JavaScript for a long time.

  • Loopback.io is a powerful Node.js framework for creating APIs and easily connecting to backend data sources. It has an Angular.js SDK and provides SDKs for iOS and Android.

Web Framework Tools:

Networking:

  • Connect is the Rack or WSGI of the Node.js world.
  • Request is a very popular HTTP request library.
  • socket.io is handy for building WebSocket servers.

Command Line Interaction:

  • minimist just command line argument parsing.
  • Yargs is a powerful library for parsing command-line arguments.
  • Commander.js is a complete solution for building single-use command-line applications.
  • Vorpal.js is a framework for building mature, immersive command-line applications.
  • Chalk makes your CLI output pretty.

Code Generators:

  • Yeoman Scaffolding tool from the command-line.
  • Skaffolder Code generator with visual and command-line interface. It generates a customizable CRUD application starting from the database schema or an OpenAPI 3.0 YAML file.

Work with streams:

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    under frameworks you should add railwayjs.com
    – Sagiv Ofek
    Jun 22, 2012 at 14:55
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    @Farm question was about node.js. Angular is a browser framework and is irrelevant here. Nov 28, 2013 at 6:32
  • Promise: To write maintainable and readable async code I would recommend github.com/kriskowal/q
    – Farm
    Dec 25, 2013 at 6:36
  • Backbone.js, MEAN, Require.js and lots more to come !!! voila!!!
    – Dileephell
    Jan 9, 2014 at 10:47
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    NodeJS is the future of javascript Jan 14, 2015 at 16:40
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Use the source, Luke.

No, but seriously I found that building Node.js from source, running the tests, and looking at the benchmarks did get me on the right track. From there, the .js files in the lib directory are a good place to look, especially the file http.js.

Update: I wrote this answer over a year ago, and since that time there has an explosion in the number of great resources available for people learning Node.js. Though I still believe diving into the source is worthwhile, I think that there are now better ways to get started. I would suggest some of the books on Node.js that are starting to come out.

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    +1 for the opening line :3 but thats how I leant to use Kohana. So it is a pretty good method as long as you can understand the source.
    – Olical
    Mar 15, 2011 at 15:19
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    Express helps you get started in the source, imo. I mean, at least it gives you a jumping off point, a working example... something to fiddle around with. expressjs.com/en/guide/routing.html Jul 27, 2012 at 5:30

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