This is the Windows app named node-js-getting-started whose latest release can be downloaded as UsingasaTerraformexample.zip. It can be run online in the free hosting provider OnWorks for workstations.
Download and run online this app named node-js-getting-started with OnWorks for free.
Follow these instructions in order to run this app:
- 1. Downloaded this application in your PC.
- 2. Enter in our file manager https://www.onworks.net/myfiles.php?username=XXXXX with the username that you want.
- 3. Upload this application in such filemanager.
- 4. Start any OS OnWorks online emulator from this website, but better Windows online emulator.
- 5. From the OnWorks Windows OS you have just started, goto our file manager https://www.onworks.net/myfiles.php?username=XXXXX with the username that you want.
- 6. Download the application and install it.
- 7. Download Wine from your Linux distributions software repositories. Once installed, you can then double-click the app to run them with Wine. You can also try PlayOnLinux, a fancy interface over Wine that will help you install popular Windows programs and games.
Wine is a way to run Windows software on Linux, but with no Windows required. Wine is an open-source Windows compatibility layer that can run Windows programs directly on any Linux desktop. Essentially, Wine is trying to re-implement enough of Windows from scratch so that it can run all those Windows applications without actually needing Windows.
SCREENSHOTS:
node-js-getting-started
DESCRIPTION:
A barebones Node.js app using Express 4. This application supports the Getting Started on Heroku with Node.js article. Make sure you have Node.js and the Heroku CLI installed. For more information about using Node.js on Heroku, see these Dev Center articles. When you create an app, a git remote (called heroku) is also created and associated with your local git repository. Heroku generates a random name (in this case sharp-rain-871) for your app, or you can pass a parameter to specify your own app name. Heroku treats logs as streams of time-ordered events aggregated from the output streams of all your app and Heroku components, providing a single channel for all of the events. Procfiles can contain additional process types. For example, you might declare one for a background worker process that processes items off of a queue.
Features
- This application supports the Getting Started on Heroku with Node.js article
- Make sure you have Node.js and the Heroku CLI installed
- Deploy to Heroku
- Run Locally
- A barebones Node.js app using Express 4
- Get started with Node on Heroku
Programming Language
JavaScript
Categories
This is an application that can also be fetched from https://sourceforge.net/projects/node-js-getting-started.mirror/. It has been hosted in OnWorks in order to be run online in an easiest way from one of our free Operative Systems.