CSC105 Backend 27/4/23
1. What is the Backend?
Backend development (often called the “server-side” development), is the creation of everything that goes on behind the scenes of a website or application that the user can’t see.
The backend normally consists of an application, server and database. As you interact with a site by entering information, this information is stored in a database that resides on a server. Results are then returned to you to be displayed on the site as frontend code.
2. Why not just connect the Frontend directly to the Database???????
- If you connect your database directly from the frontend, you are exposing all your database credentials to the browser, and anyone can look up the code in the console and take it.
- When your database is exposed, anyone can query the data from your databse, just by running a database query in browser console, which exposes other users data too.
- it is not secure at all for managing data or making an algorithm at the frontend.
3. What is API?
API stands for Application Programming Interface. that is the mechanism that enable two software components to communicate with each other using a set of definitions and protocols. For example Frontend and Backend are mostly using REST APIs to communicate with each other.
4. What is REST APIs?
A RESTful API is an architectural style for an application program interface (API) that uses HTTP requests to access the data using HTTP protocol to communicate between Frontend and Backend.
Let's see the example
- Go to the Instagram on website. https://www.instagram.com/
- Go to any profile you want.
- Press
Ctrl (or Command) + Shift + I or F12
to open DevTools, the chooseNetwork
tab and filterFetch/XHR data
- For some students that are using Microsoft Edge - Click the right arrow and choose
Network
- Refresh the page.
- After you have refreshed the page, you will see that a lot of
requests
that sent to the Intragram server.
- Click the row name that leading with
?username=...
and click theHeaders
Let's see the details in the Headers -> General
- The Request URL is the link that you sent to request the data from the Instragram server
- The Request Method is the method that Identify the action to be performed for a given resource from the Instragram server, For this class we will focus on 5 HTTP methods (you will see the example later).
- GET - Retrieve data from the server
- PUT - Handles updates by replacing the entire entity
- POST - Create data
- PATCH - Only updates the fields that you give it
- DELETE - Delete data
- The Status Code is the HTTP response status codes indicate whether a specific HTTP request has been successfully completed. Responses that we focused in this class are grouped in three classes:
- Successful responses (200 – 299) ✅
- Client error responses (400 – 499) ❌
- Server error responses (500 – 599) ❌
- The Preview and Response are the response from the Instragram server that mostly uses JSON format.
- Right click at the data response at the first line and click copy object.
- Go to the Visual Studio Code and Click
open
and create a folder and clickopen
- Create a
response.json
file
- Paste the data that you have copied from the webstie.
- This is the data response from instragram that uses to display in the website. 👆🏻
5. What is JSON?
JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) is a standard text-based format for representing structured data based on JavaScript object syntax. It is commonly used for transmitting data in web applications (e.g., sending some data from the server to the client, so it can be displayed on a web page)
How to access the data from JSON?
Let's see the example ...
- In the Visual Studio Code, create an
index.js
file
- Copy this code to your
index.js
file
const simpleJsonData = {
squadName: "Super hero squad",
homeTown: "Metro City",
formed: 2016,
secretBase: "Super tower",
active: true,
permissions: {
accessData: false,
fly: true,
},
members: [
{
name: "Molecule Man",
age: 29,
secretIdentity: "Dan Jukes",
powers: ["Radiation resistance", "Turning tiny", "Radiation blast"],
},
{
name: "Madame Uppercut",
age: 39,
secretIdentity: "Jane Wilson",
powers: [
"Million tonne punch",
"Damage resistance",
"Superhuman reflexes",
],
},
{
name: "Eternal Flame",
age: 1000000,
secretIdentity: "Unknown",
powers: [
"Immortality",
"Heat Immunity",
"Inferno",
"Teleportation",
"Interdimensional travel",
],
},
],
};
If we loaded this string into a JavaScript program and parsed it into a variable called simpleJsonData
for example, we could then access the data inside it using the same dot/bracket notation we looked at in the JavaScript object basics article. For example:
simpleJsonData.squadName // "Super hero squad" -> This one is more simple
// or
simpleJsonData["squadName"] // "Super hero squad"
Try to run from the VS Code
const simpleJsonData = {
squadName: "Super hero squad",
homeTown: "Metro City",
...
};
console.log(simpleJsonData.squadName);
console.log(simpleJsonData["squadName"]);
- Create a terminal
- Run the code
node index.js
that will run theindex.js
file that usin NodeJS - You will see the the output the terminal that show the value of the
squadName
try more ...
simpleJsonData.permissions.accessData
// or
simpleJsonData["permissions"]["accessData"]
// Same output
To access data further down the hierarchy, you have to chain the required property names and array indexes together. For example, to access the third superpower of the second hero listed in the members list, you'd do this:
simpleJsonData.members[0]
// or
simpleJsonData["members"][0]
// Same output
simpleJsonData.members[1].powers[2]
// or
simpleJsonData['members'][1]['powers'][2]
// Same output
Let's try to import the response.json
file that you copied from the Instragram.
- Create a
simpleInstragramData.js
file
- import the
response.json
tosampleInstragramData.js
file
const igData = require("./response.json");
- Try to show some data from
response.json
--- End of the example ---
6. ExpressJS
Express JS is a Node.js framework designed to build API's that facilitate communication through HTTP requests and responses. One of the remarkable things about Express is that it gives developers complete control over the requests and responses that are associated with each of its app’s methods.
Let's try to write code .....
- Go to the Visual Studio Code and Click
open
and create a folder and clickopen
- Create a
New Terminal
-
Run
npm init
in your terminal for initializing your JavaScript project -
After you run the
npm init
command, it will ask you about thepackage name
which is the name of your project. (if you don't want to name your project you just pressenter
to skip, and it will name the project as a name that you see in the parenthesis) 👇🏻
package name
can only contain URL-friendly characters and name can no longer contain capital letters.
- In the
version
, you can specify the version of the project, If you don't want to specify the version, you just pressEnter
to skip this, it will set version 1.0.0 as default. 👇🏻
- The
description
is just a description of your project, If you don't want to add a description, you just pressEnter
to skip this. 👇🏻
- The
entry point
is the file from which execution starts. It depends on project configuration and run time environment of the technology we are using.
- Examples : For a node.js project
index.js
is used initializes the app and glues everything together.
- For the entry point we will use
index.js
file as a main file, pressEnter
to skip this, and use theindex.js
as a default. 👆🏻
- Skip the
test command
👇🏻
- For the
git repository
, you just leave it blank.
- For the
keywords
, you just leave it blank.
- The
licence
, you just leave it blank, the default will be an ISC licence.
- After that, it will show the data in the package.json file that shows the information of the project that you have filled in the command line.
- Press
Enter
to create a JavaScript project.
- After that, you will see the
package.json
file that has been created after you create a JavaScript project.
7. What is the package.json
?
The package.json
file contains descriptive and functional metadata about a project, such as a name, version, and dependencies. The file provides the npm package manager with various information to help identify the project and handle dependencies.
{
"name": "simple_express",
"version": "1.0.0",
"description": "Simple ExpressJS project",
"main": "index.js",
"scripts": {
"test": "echo \"Error: no test specified\" && exit 1"
},
"author": "",
"license": "ISC"
}