Click here to Skip to main content
15,891,184 members
Articles / Programming Languages / Javascript
Tip/Trick

Hitching a Ride on the huMONGOus Meteor, Part 9 of 9

Rate me:
Please Sign up or sign in to vote.
0.00/5 (No votes)
11 Aug 2015CPOL2 min read 5.9K   1
Final Installment of the 9-part series "As the Meteor Blazes" - Meatier Meteor and MongoDB for Mutating Mavens

Well, Just Think About It. Why Did the Meteor Hit You?

In the first 8 installments of this series, we zipped through the stratosphere at cheek-flapping pace, doing everything necessary to perform the basics: entering and saving data, then reading and displaying it.

We installed meteor, created a project, crafted some custom HTML, created a MongoDB collection and wrote data to that collection in JavaScript, read it back out from the collection and displayed it in an HTML table. We then spruced the page up a bit with HTML and CSS so that it wasn't quite as... "utilitarian," to put it charitably. Finally, we some JavaScript code to filter and order the result set returned from the Collection so that duplicates were not displayed, empty records were also omitted, and the Documents were displayed in a logical order (by Year Arrived, then Year Departed).

This is just the beginning, though. The things that can be accomplished with Meteor are virtually limitless, and the galaxy in which Meteor resides is chock full of tools and ports in a Meteorstorm that can be utilized as you move forward in the Meteorama, if you choose to become a Meteor Maven.

I've Figured It Out, It's Because We Need a Real Superhero

As noted, doing the basics with Meteor is not rocket science (no pun intended), but to move beyond those things, you may want to take advantage of the many facilities available for that.

The ease of getting started with Meteor might be compared to learning to play the guitar. To play a little guitar doesn't take much time or effort - just about anybody can do it. However, to become a virtuoso takes a lot of time and effort. The same is true with becoming a Meteor Maven, so to help you lift off on a meteoric rise, here are some links that can be of assistance. Check them out, and Keep them handy.

The Basics

Meteor Home Page

Introductory Video

Creating your first app

Official Meteor Tutorials

Meteor Documentation - Basic

Meteor Documentation - Full API

Cool Tools and Resources

Meteor Packages from the Atmosphere

Meteor Pad

Cloud 9 IDE

Meteor Tools

References

StackOverflow Meteor questions

Meteor Forum

Official Meteor Blog

Meteor YouTube Channel

Show's Over. Says Who?

This is the end of my 9-part series on getting started with Meteor - just the bare-bones, nuthin' fancy stuff. Who knows, though? I may write some more tips in the future as I delve further into this "way far out" technology. After all, I haven't even referenced "Rocket Man" or "Space Oddity," not to mention used any quotes from "Captain Stormfield's Visit to Heaven"

License

This article, along with any associated source code and files, is licensed under The Code Project Open License (CPOL)


Written By
Founder Across Time & Space
United States United States
I am in the process of morphing from a software developer into a portrayer of Mark Twain. My monologue (or one-man play, entitled "The Adventures of Mark Twain: As Told By Himself" and set in 1896) features Twain giving an overview of his life up till then. The performance includes the relating of interesting experiences and humorous anecdotes from Twain's boyhood and youth, his time as a riverboat pilot, his wild and woolly adventures in the Territory of Nevada and California, and experiences as a writer and world traveler, including recollections of meetings with many of the famous and powerful of the 19th century - royalty, business magnates, fellow authors, as well as intimate glimpses into his home life (his parents, siblings, wife, and children).

Peripatetic and picaresque, I have lived in eight states; specifically, besides my native California (where I was born and where I now again reside) in chronological order: New York, Montana, Alaska, Oklahoma, Wisconsin, Idaho, and Missouri.

I am also a writer of both fiction (for which I use a nom de plume, "Blackbird Crow Raven", as a nod to my Native American heritage - I am "½ Cowboy, ½ Indian") and nonfiction, including a two-volume social and cultural history of the U.S. which covers important events from 1620-2006: http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/blackbirdcraven

Comments and Discussions

 
QuestionSome honorable notes for Meteor Pin
George Tourtsinakis14-May-16 1:54
George Tourtsinakis14-May-16 1:54 

General General    News News    Suggestion Suggestion    Question Question    Bug Bug    Answer Answer    Joke Joke    Praise Praise    Rant Rant    Admin Admin   

Use Ctrl+Left/Right to switch messages, Ctrl+Up/Down to switch threads, Ctrl+Shift+Left/Right to switch pages.