Node.js Stream Module
Example
Write to a writeable stream:
var http = require('http');
http.createServer(function (req, res) {
res.writeHead(200, {'Content-Type': 'text/html'});
res.write('Hello
World!');
res.end();
}).listen(8080);
Run example »
Definition and Usage
The Stream module provides a way of handling streaming data.
There are two types of streams: readable and writeable.
An example of a readable stream is the response object you get when working with the http.createServer() method.
An example of a writable stream is the request object you get when working with the http.createServer() method.
Syntax
Some methods returns a readable/writable stream object, like http.createServer(), and if that is the case, you do not have to include the stream module.
Otherwise, the syntax for including the Stream module in your application:
var stream = require('stream');
Readable Stream Properties and Methods
Method | Description |
---|---|
isPaused() | Returns true if the state of the readable stream is paused, otherwise false |
pause() | Pauses the readable stream |
pipe() | Turns the readable stream into the specified writable stream |
read() | Returns a specified part of the readable stream |
resume() | Resumes a paused stream |
setEncoding() | Sets the character encoding of the readable stream |
unpipe() | Stops turning a readable stream into a writable stream, caused by the pipe() method |
unshift() | Pushes some specified data back into the internal buffer |
wrap() | Helps reading streams made by older Node.js versions |
Writable Stream Properties and Methods
Method | Description |
---|---|
cork() | Stops the writable stream and all written data will be buffered in memory |
end() | Ends the writable stream |
setDefaultEncoding() | Sets the encoding for the writable stream |
uncork() | Flushes all data that has been buffered since the cork() method was called |
write() | Writes data to the stream |
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