2019-07-15
1898
#node
Paige Niedringhaus
3791
Jul 15, 2019 ⋅ 6 min read

Node.js 12: The future of server-side JavaScript

Paige Niedringhaus Digital marketer turned fullstack software engineer. JavaScript is my language of choice, but I enjoy learning new things in new languages.

Recent posts:

Leveraging React Server Components In Redwoodjs

Leveraging React Server Components in RedwoodJS

RedwoodJS announced support for server-side rendering and RSCs in its Bighorn release. Explore this feature for when it’s production-ready.

Stephan Miller
May 6, 2024 ⋅ 9 min read
Exploring The Aha Stack: Astro, Htmx, Alpine — A Complete Tutorial With A Demo Project And Comparison To Other Stacks

Exploring the AHA stack: Tutorial, demo, and comparison

The AHA stack — Astro, htmx, and Alpine — is a solid web development stack for smaller apps that emphasize frontend speed and SEO.

Oyinkansola Awosan
May 3, 2024 ⋅ 13 min read
Comparing Hattip Vs Express Js For Modern Application Development

Comparing Hattip vs. Express.js for modern app development

Explore what Hattip is, how it works, its benefits and key features, and the differences between Hattip and Express.js.

Antonello Zanini
May 2, 2024 ⋅ 8 min read
Using React Shepherd To Build A Site Tour

Using React Shepherd to build a site tour

React Shepherd stands out as a site tour library due to its elegant UI and out-of-the-box, easy-to-use React Context implementation.

Onuorah Bonaventure
May 1, 2024 ⋅ 14 min read
View all posts

7 Replies to "Node.js 12: The future of server-side JavaScript"

  1. Clarification towards the end… Node is *NOT* single-threaded. The main JS runs in an event loop on a single thread. Async I/O (and often other compiled modules) run within a thread pool. Node doesn’t run server and browser, but the code can run on both.

    1. Clarification, not all async events are using thread pool, many of them use low level underlying OS functionality, but not separate thread polling. Http module is the best example.

  2. Also, node doesn’t have to “produce dynamic web content”. It does any type of server-side (or even command line) work. It can power a websocket server, PDF export service, host an event/message system or do any other work not related to rendering web pages.

Leave a Reply