Set up Node.js environment
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Installation
First, let's install Node.js, and an app called Postman to test our API. You will be coding along with me, so make sure you also have git installed.
Node.js comes with something called NPM (Node Package Manager) that we will use manage our node modules. You can check if you have Node, NPM, and Git installed by running these commands (one at a time):
node -v
npm -v
git --version
You should get a version back from each of these commands. If you get an error, you'll want to check that it was correctly installed.
Clone Template Repository
By signing up for this course, a template repository was created on your GitHub account. Clone this repository locally on your computer and navigate to it by running:
git clone https://github.com/saxenaaman628/node-express-course.git
cd node-express-server-intro
File Setup
Open the folder you just cloned in your favorite text editor.
You should have a few files already created:
.gitignore
server.js
The server file will be the main one we use. In the .gitignore folder, you should see this line at the top /node_modules
Express (the server library we will install) is a node_module. Rather than track the entire library in our git history, we will create a package.json file, which will allow us to install and save node modules.
Run this from your command line: npm init -y
You should have a package.json file in your folder now.
Now you can install Express using NPM. Enter this command in the terminal: npm install express --save
A folder called node_modules should apear in your project. This is where the actual files for express are stored. If you open the folder, you can see how many files there are. These will only be stored on your machine, because we told git to ignore this entire directory.
In your package.json file and make sure you have something like this under your dependencies:
"dependencies": {
"express": "^4.17.1",
}
The number on the right is the version you downloaded. Since we aren't tracking the actual node_modules
folder, this section is a reference used to re-install the modules your application depends on.
When you are finished with this section, push your file to GitHub for the next step:
git add .
git commit -m "initial file setup"
git push origin master
Now that you pushed up those changes your repository should look like this.