You did a great job of summarizing what's awesome about Node.js. My feeling is that Node.js is especially suited for applications where you'd like to maintain a persistent connection from the browser back to the server. Using a technique known as "long-polling", you can write an application that sends updates to the user in real time. Doing long polling on many of the web's giants, like Ruby on Rails or Django, would create immense load on the server, because each active client eats up one server process. This situation amounts to a tarpit attack. When you use something like Node.js, the server has no need of maintaining separate threads for each open connection.
This means you can create a browser-based chat application in Node.js that takes almost no system resources to serve a great many clients. Any time you want to do this sort of long-polling, Node.js is a great option.
It's worth mentioning that Ruby and Python both have tools to do this sort of thing (eventmachine and twisted, respectively), but that Node.js does it exceptionally well, and from the ground up. JavaScript is exceptionally well situated to a callback-based concurrency model, and it excels here. Also, being able to serialize and deserialize with JSON native to both the client and the server is pretty nifty.
I look forward to reading other answers here, this is a fantastic question.
It's worth pointing out that Node.js is also great for situations in which you'll be reusing a lot of code across the client/server gap. The Meteor framework makes this really easy, and a lot of folks are suggesting this might be the future of web development. I can say from experience that it's a whole lot of fun to write code in Meteor, and a big part of this is spending less time thinking about how you're going to restructure your data, so the code that runs in the browser can easily manipulate it and pass it back.
Here's an article on Pyramid and long-polling, which turns out to be very easy to set up with a little help from gevent: TicTacToe and Long Polling with Pyramid.
UPDATE: As Seyeong Jeong points out in their answer below, since npm 5.2.0 you can use npx [command]
, which is more convenient.
OLD ANSWER for versions before 5.2.0:
The problem with putting
./node_modules/.bin
into your PATH is that it only works when your current working directory is the root of your project directory structure (i.e. the location of node_modules
)
Independent of what your working directory is, you can get the path of locally installed binaries with
npm bin
To execute a locally installed coffee
binary independent of where you are in the project directory hierarchy you can use this bash construct
PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH coffee
I aliased this to npm-exec
alias npm-exec='PATH=$(npm bin):$PATH'
So, now I can
npm-exec coffee
to run the correct copy of coffee no matter of where I am
$ pwd
/Users/regular/project1
$ npm-exec which coffee
/Users/regular/project1/node_modules/.bin/coffee
$ cd lib/
$ npm-exec which coffee
/Users/regular/project1/node_modules/.bin/coffee
$ cd ~/project2
$ npm-exec which coffee
/Users/regular/project2/node_modules/.bin/coffee
Best Answer
I found that the following code fragment worked best for me. Since it uses
require
to load thepackage.json
, it works regardless the current working directory.A warning, courtesy of @Pathogen: