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Full Stack Web Development with Raspberry Pi 3

You're reading from   Full Stack Web Development with Raspberry Pi 3 Build complex web applications with a portable computer

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788295895
Length 214 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Soham Kamani Soham Kamani
Author Profile Icon Soham Kamani
Soham Kamani
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started on the Raspberry Pi FREE CHAPTER 2. Getting Up-and-Running with Web Development on the Raspberry Pi 3. Running a Node Server on the Pi 4. Extracting Information from the GPIO Pins 5. Retrieving Sensor Readings from the Server 6. Creating a Web Page to Display Sensor Data 7. Enhancing Our UI - Using Interactive Charts 8. SQLite - The Fast and Portable Database 9. Integrating SQLite into Our Application 10. Making our Application Real Time with Web Sockets 11. Deploying our application to Firebase 12. Using Firebase APIs to Update Our Application

Making the server response data-friendly

Our server is currently returning HTML responses. A humidity of 38% will give us this response:

    <strong>38</strong>

While this works for our current setup, it is not ideal for when we need raw data, like we do now for making our charts. It is far easier to convert raw data to HTML as opposed to doing the opposite, so we can make our sensor displays compatible for raw data as well.

The most popular standard for data interchange, and one that is almost universal now, is JavaScript Object Notation (JSON). JSON is a very simple data interchange specification that is used to serialize data that is exchanged between applications. As we have been programming in JavaScript the whole time, JSON should feel very familiar to us.

In this section, we will be modifying our application server to return JSON responses, as opposed to the...

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