Introduction
Routing refers to how an application’s endpoints (URIs) respond to client requests. Expressjs official Docs
You define routing using express app
object corresponding HTTP methods POST
and GET
method.
For example
The following code shows an example of a very basic route.
const express = require('express')
const app = express() // express object
// respond with "hello world" when a GET request is made to the /
app.get('/', function (req, res) {
res.send('hello world')
})
Route Methods
A route method is derived from one of the HTTP methods and is attached and called on app
object, an instance of the express
class.
GET and POST Methods to the root off the app:
// GET method route
app.get('/', function (req, res) {
res.send('GET request to the homepage')
})
// POST method route
app.post('/', function (req, res) {
res.send('POST request to the homepage')
})
Route Paths
These routes defined in the above code snippet will map to:
http://localhost:3000/
when the app is run locally and matching depends on whether the client uses the POST
or GET
method and vice versa.
// GET method route
app.get('/about', function (req, res) {
res.send('about route')
})
//
The above route matches to http://localhost:3000/about
when app is run locally.
Summary
We’ve learned how to define routes
in a very basic approach. In the next article, we shall learn about Route Params