2014
Pluralsight
Shawn Wildermuth
3:43
English
Some developers prefer to use a full Interactive Development Environment (IDE) when creating projects. For JavaScript developers of all different stripes, WebStorm by JetBrains fills that need. In this course, we'll dig into the fundamentals of how WebStorm can aid JavaScript developers creating projects for both client-side JavaScript, CSS, and HTML, as well as developing server-side JavaScript using Node.js.
Installation and Setup
Introduction
What Is WebStorm?
Getting WebStorm
Installing WebStorm
Your First Project
Touring the IDE
Organizing the IDE
Using the Terminal
Setting It Up for Your Coding Style
Commands and Key Bindings
Summary
HTML and CSS in WebStorm
Introduction
Using Existing Code
Coding in HTML
Live Templates
Using Bower
Paths
Coding in CSS
Using Scopes
Live Editing
Using LESS and SASS
Summary
JavaScript Development With WebStorm
Introduction
Coding in JavaScript
Code Navigation
Language Injection
Debugging Code
Debugging Panel
Watches
Authoring Live Templates
Using CoffeeScript and TypeScript
Debugging Meta Languages
Summary
AngularJS and WebStorm
Introduction
Getting Started
Writing Controllers
Using Routing
More Data Binding
Directives
Summary
Node.js and WebStorm
Introduction
Getting Started
Adding Node.js to an Existing Project
Node Code Completion
Directories and WebStorm
Adding Express.js
Adding Views
Debugging Node.js With WebStorm
Building REST APIs
Deployments
Summary
Task Runners, Version Control, and Plugins
Introduction
Using Grunt.js
Using Gulp.js
What Is Local History?
Using Git
GitHub Integration
Using WebStorm Plugins
Summary
http://pluralsight/
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