48

So I'm starting to use Node.js. I saw the video with Ryan Dahl on Nodejs.org and heard he recommended Express-js for websites.

I downloaded the latest version of Express, and began to code. I have a fully fledged static view up on /, but as soon as I try sending parameters, I get errors like this:

Cannot GET /wiki

I tried following the guide on expressjs.com but the way one uses routes has changed in the latest version, which makes the guide unusable.

Guide:

app.get('/users/:id?', function(req, res, next){
    var id = req.params.id;
    if (id) {
        // do something
    } else {
        next();
    }
});

Generated by Express:

app.get('/', routes.index);

My problem arises when I try and add another route.

app.get('/wiki', routes.wiki_show);

I've tried a bunch of approaches, but I keep getting the Cannot GET /wiki (404) error.

routes/index.js looks like this:

exports.index = function(req, res) {
    res.render('index', { title: 'Test', articles: articles, current_article: current_article, sections: sections })
};

The only thing I did there was add some parameters (arrays in the same file) and this i working. But when I copy the contents and change exports.index to exports.wiki or exports.wiki_show I still get the Cannot GET /wiki error.

Can anyone explain to me what I'm missing here? - Thanks.

6
  • Did you add the router middleware?
    – fent
    Jan 14, 2012 at 21:02
  • You downloaded the lastest Express? Did you get it from github or through NPM?
    – Ryan Olds
    Jan 14, 2012 at 22:02
  • 1
    @DeaDEnD Yes, I'm quite sure of that :) Jan 14, 2012 at 22:13
  • @RyanOlds I got it from GitHub :) Jan 14, 2012 at 22:13
  • Master isn't stable. Install it using NPM, you should get 2.5.6. Also, the router middleware is automatically bound when you specify a route.
    – Ryan Olds
    Jan 15, 2012 at 0:23

5 Answers 5

76

So, after I created my question, I got this related list on the right with a similar issue: Organize routes in Node.js.

The answer in that post linked to the Express repo on GitHub and suggests to look at the 'route-separation' example.

This helped me change my code, and I now have it working. - Thanks for your comments.

My implementation ended up looking like this;

I require my routes in the app.js:

var express = require('express')
  , site = require('./site')
  , wiki = require('./wiki');

And I add my routes like this:

app.get('/', site.index);
app.get('/wiki/:id', wiki.show);
app.get('/wiki/:id/edit', wiki.edit);

I have two files called wiki.js and site.js in the root of my app, containing this:

exports.edit = function(req, res) {

    var wiki_entry = req.params.id;

    res.render('wiki/edit', {
        title: 'Editing Wiki',
        wiki: wiki_entry
    })
}
1
  • 3
    Express is great. As a beginner, it's also useful to build a web server from the ground up once to understand node. I found a tutorial here which I went through then went straight to express: nodebeginner.org
    – bryanmac
    Jan 28, 2012 at 13:22
10

The route-map express example matches url paths with objects which in turn matches http verbs with functions. This lays the routing out in a tree, which is concise and easy to read. The apps's entities are also written as objects with the functions as enclosed methods.

var express = require('../../lib/express')
  , verbose = process.env.NODE_ENV != 'test'
  , app = module.exports = express();

app.map = function(a, route){
  route = route || '';
  for (var key in a) {
    switch (typeof a[key]) {
      // { '/path': { ... }}
      case 'object':
        app.map(a[key], route + key);
        break;
      // get: function(){ ... }
      case 'function':
        if (verbose) console.log('%s %s', key, route);
        app[key](route, a[key]);
        break;
    }
  }
};

var users = {
  list: function(req, res){
    res.send('user list');
  },

  get: function(req, res){
    res.send('user ' + req.params.uid);
  },

  del: function(req, res){
    res.send('delete users');
  }
};

var pets = {
  list: function(req, res){
    res.send('user ' + req.params.uid + '\'s pets');
  },

  del: function(req, res){
    res.send('delete ' + req.params.uid + '\'s pet ' + req.params.pid);
  }
};

app.map({
  '/users': {
    get: users.list,
    del: users.del,
    '/:uid': {
      get: users.get,
      '/pets': {
        get: pets.list,
        '/:pid': {
          del: pets.del
        }
      }
    }
  }
});

app.listen(3000);
0
5

Seems that only index.js get loaded when you require("./routes") . I used the following code in index.js to load the rest of the routes:

var fs = require('fs')
  , path = require('path');

fs.readdirSync(__dirname).forEach(function(file){
  var route_fname = __dirname + '/' + file;
  var route_name = path.basename(route_fname, '.js');
  if(route_name !== 'index' && route_name[0] !== "."){ 
    exports[route_name] = require(route_fname)[route_name];
  }
});
2
  • This is a nice way to avoid having a ton of require statements if you're not grouping your routes by a sort of namespace.
    – ZachB
    Jul 9, 2013 at 22:53
  • Actually, changing the ~last line to exports[route_name] = require(route_fname) makes it so you can later refer to routes by a namespace, e.g. routes.users.show.
    – ZachB
    Jul 10, 2013 at 5:52
4

You could also organise them into modules. So it would be something like.

./
controllers
    index.js
    indexController.js
app.js

and then in the indexController.js of the controllers export your controllers.

//indexController.js
module.exports = function(){
//do some set up

var self = {
     indexAction : function (req,res){
       //do your thing
}
return self;
};

then in index.js of controllers dir

exports.indexController = require("./indexController");

and finally in app.js

var controllers = require("./controllers");

app.get("/",controllers.indexController().indexAction);

I think this approach allows for clearer seperation and also you can configure your controllers by passing perhaps a db connection in.

0
1

No one should ever have to keep writing app.use('/someRoute', require('someFile')) until it forms a heap of code.

It just doesn't make sense at all to be spending time invoking/defining routings. Even if you do need custom control, it's probably only for some of the time, and for the most bit you want to be able to just create a standard file structure of routings and have a module do it automatically.

Try Route Magic

As you scale your app, the routing invocations will start to form a giant heap of code that serves no purpose. You want to do just 2 lines of code to handle all the app.use routing invocations with Route Magic like this:

const magic = require('express-routemagic')
magic.use(app, __dirname, '[your route directory]')

For those you want to handle manually, just don't use pass the directory to Magic.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.