JavaScript: Difference between revisions
Brian Wilson (talk | contribs) |
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* [[Bootstrap]] (need to work on this page) | * [[Bootstrap]] (need to work on this page) | ||
* [[OpenLayers]] (duh) | * [[OpenLayers]] (duh) | ||
* parcel | |||
=== Things to look at soonish === | === Things to look at soonish === |
Revision as of 22:17, 25 October 2018
Maybe it's spelled "Javascript", I can never keep it straight.
I will be developing new county GIS Web applications using OpenLayers and that means updating my Web development skills with Node, Javascript, and friends.
Todo
Read more books (and book-like things)
- W3 Schools
- JavaScript reference
- Bootstrap 3 tutorial
- lots more incl SQL, HTML, CSS, PHP, ...
- Eloquent Javascript, 3rd edition
- High Performance Browser Networking
- Learning Node.js Development seems good so far, or some as yet unidentified Node book, there are hundreds.
- How to write a JavaScript package... and other blog posts
Ole port
I forked Ole from its Boundless past to 2018, and writing about that process in my new Github Wiki.
Look at more
- Bootstrap (need to work on this page)
- OpenLayers (duh)
- parcel
Things to look at soonish
- Hyperapp tiny framework with state management. So small even I might be able to understand and use it.
- Preact https://dev.to/aalises/preact--typescript--parcel--redux-zero-rebuilding-the-qmenta-front-end-focusing-on-performance-and-minimalism-1lnp
- React
- Redux state management
Using but don't want to know about
- jquery
- babel - An Ole dependency that translates JS code
Things to ignore for now
- Ionic cross platform build thingie https://www.javascripttuts.com/the-ionic-build-process-tutorial/
- Grunt, Bower, Yeoman
- Browserify
- Angular, Dojo,
- 150 other app frameworks
Using Node
There is a nice blog post here that explains all the stuff I learned painfully slowly over the last month. Read the first part, stop reading when you get to the section on Bower. Time has marched on and now there is Parcel.
Node was originally intended to be for server side Javascript but ends up being a great development tool for client side applications. I have not actually used it on a server yet.
Using Parcel bundler
Automatically creates bundles and runs your app, does "hot module replacement", you can watch what's happening... beautiful. That means when you edit+save that Parcel (node really) sees the file change and triggers a rebuild. Sometimes I have to hit refresh in the browser.
Except - does not work in Visual Studio -- after saving from VS, Parcel does not always see changes. Occasionally it does, I get excited, then it stops.
Parcel + Emacs
Parcel HMR does not work with Emacs until you turn off autobackup files with this in your .emacs:
(setq make-backup-files nil)
I like backup files but I like hot module replacement even more.
A month in and I find I use emacs 90% of the time instead of using VS. Code completion in VS is great but so is the quick edit/debug cycle with emacs.
Building a standalone package
Okay but if I am NOT building an app and instead want to build a standalone module and want to test it in Parcel, how do I do that? I think I should look at https://parceljs.org/packagers.html
Using Visual Studio
As I said before I started using Parcel I used Microsoft Visual Studio. Visual Studio Code looks nice but I don't feel a need to develop new skills right now.
I installed the Node.JS workload in VS and installed the (standalone) portable Node.JS package.
Now in VS I can create a web Node.JS project, and I can run and test the complete app on my desktop so I don't need any access to a real web server.
In my VS project, I have to set the Node.exe path to C:\Users\bwilson\Portable\node-v8.11.3-win-x64\node.exe Once I do that it can find the other tools like npm too.
My typical server.js looks like this; I keep it in a VS template at github to make project creation easier.
var http = require('http'); var port = process.env.PORT || 1337; var path = require('path'), fs = require('fs'); var base = 'C:/GeoModel/WebMaps/OpenlayersApp'; http.createServer(function (req, res) { pathname = base + req.url; if (req.url === '/') { pathname = base + '/index.html'; } console.log(pathname); if (fs.exists(pathname)) { res.writeHead(404); res.write('Page not found 404\n'); res.end(); } else { res.setHeader('Content-Type', 'text/html'); res.statusCode = 200; var file = fs.createReadStream(pathname); file.on("open", function () { file.pipe(res); }); } }).listen(port); console.log("Server running on port ", port);
When I run the project, it launches server js and in turn launches a browser and serves up my index.html. I can click local links therein. I can edit the index.html and hit reload in the browser and ta-da! there's my updated page.
Debugging the client
Basically either way you run a tiny server on your desktop and watch output in a cmd window and use F12 to open the console in the browser.
Parcel
Parcel gives you "hot module replacement" and you don't have to write and maintain a server.js, the server is built in.
I have a script set up in package.json to launch parcel and it in turn launches a chrome browser. In a cmd window I type
npm test
Note I use a cmd window not a git bash shell, because I found that npm started node.exe processes that exit in a cmd window but just live on forever eating memory in bash. I had to kill them off manually.
Running "npm run-script build" creates a deployment bundle in the dist/ folder, copy that to a server and voila! Deployed.
Node
Refer to https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/visualstudio/debugger/client-side-script-debugging
NOTE if you have 15.7 installed: Change in 15.7
I was able to change my default browser to IE and get that going. Good news. Now I need to make it work in Chrome, this guy's page helped me: JavaScript debugging in VisualStudio with Chrome and Chrome's page on the subject.
- Start chrome in remote debug mode: chrome.exe --remote-debugging-port=9222
- Attach Visual Studio: "Debug" -> "Attach to Process..." -> select the chrome instance
Done.
Links
- Blog about Node
- Parcel docs
- Speaking Javascript : An In-Depth Guide for Programmers by Dr. Axel Rauschmayer
- Eloquent Javascript, third edition Written by Marijn Haverbeke. 3rd edition comes out in print in November 2018
- JavaScript Garden
- JavaScript Pocket Reference (O'Reilly)