node-inspector
q
node-inspector | q | |
---|---|---|
2 | 9 | |
12,651 | 14,948 | |
0.1% | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 6 years ago | 7 months ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
node-inspector
-
Understanding and Preventing Memory Leaks in Node.js
node-inspector (GitHub | NPM) lets you connect to a running app by running the node-debug command. This command will load Node Inspector in your default browser. Node Inspector supports Heap Profiling and can be useful for debugging memory leak issues.
-
7 tips for a Node.js developer
Node-inspector lets you do some really cool things like live code changing, step debugging, scope injection and a bunch of other cool stuff. It’s bit involved to setup, so I’ll let you follow the instructions over at https://github.com/node-inspector/node-inspector
q
-
How to make Ajax request through NodeJS to an endpoint
How can I achieve this in NodeJS. I wonder if Q Library can be utilized in this case
- WTF ¿Qué es una promesa en Javascript?
-
es6-cheatsheet
Prior to ES6, we used bluebird or Q. Now we have Promises natively:
-
One programming concept that took you a while to understand, and how it finally clicked for you
JavaScript Promises were a nightmare to wrap my head around. Not the fancy async/await syntax we have now, but the early stuff like kriskowal’s q. Wasn’t really until Promise was native did I fully understand it. Someone told me “the .then function only runs if you call resolve() in the previous block”. I think that’s what made it click.
-
How to specify resolution and rejection type of the promise in JSDoc?
I have some code that returns a promise object, e.g. using Q library for NodeJS.
-
Resolved Promises and Promise Fates
Before promises arrived natively in JS, there were(and still are) many separate independent promise implementations in the form of third-party libraries for example Q, RSVP, etc. Even jQuery has its own custom implementation that they call deferreds. The name and the implementation might differ from library to library but the intention is the same, making asynchronous code behave like synchronous code.
-
Introduction to Asynchronous JavaScript
Promises are a popular way of getting rid of callback hell. Originally it was a type of construct introduced by JavaScript libraries like Q and when.js, but these types of libraries became popular enough that promises are now provided natively in ECMAScript 6.
-
7 tips for a Node.js developer
Another great library is Q https://github.com/kriskowal/q. This library is exposes the concept of promises. A promise is basically an object that is returned from a method with the “promise” that it will eventually provide a return value. This ties is very neatly with the asynchronous nature of javascript and node.js.
-
How to Return multiple functions and values while working with REST APIs (Part 1)
q : This module is used for creating custom promises. Check it out here
What are some alternatives?
debug - A tiny JavaScript debugging utility modelled after Node.js core's debugging technique. Works in Node.js and web browsers
async - Async utilities for node and the browser
ndb - ndb is an improved debugging experience for Node.js, enabled by Chrome DevTools
Bluebird - :bird: :zap: Bluebird is a full featured promise library with unmatched performance.
swagger-stats - API Observability. Trace API calls and Monitor API performance, health and usage statistics in Node.js Microservices.
when - A solid, fast Promises/A+ and when() implementation, plus other async goodies.
devtool - [OBSOLETE] runs Node.js programs through Chromium DevTools
contra - :surfer: Asynchronous flow control with a functional taste to it
Theseus - A pretty darn cool JavaScript debugger for Brackets
angular-async-loader - Load modules and components asynchronously for angular 1.x application.
TraceGL - TraceGL MPL release
ObjectEventTarget - A same behaviour EventTarget prototype, that can work with any object from JavaScript