Full-stack-skills express
Provides comprehensive guidance for Express.js framework including routing, middleware, request handling, error handling, and API development. Use when the user asks about Express, needs to create HTTP servers, set up routes, implement middleware, or build REST APIs.
install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/partme-ai/full-stack-skills
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/partme-ai/full-stack-skills "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/nodejs-skills/express" ~/.claude/skills/partme-ai-full-stack-skills-express && rm -rf "$T"
manifest:
skills/nodejs-skills/express/SKILL.mdsource content
When to use this skill
Use this skill whenever the user wants to:
- Build Node.js HTTP servers with Express routing and middleware
- Configure CORS, body parsing, error handling, and static files
- Create REST APIs with request validation and response formatting
- Set up production-ready Express applications with security headers
How to use this skill
Workflow
- Create app — instantiate Express and configure middleware
- Define routes — set up route handlers for each endpoint
- Add error handling — implement error middleware for consistent responses
- Deploy — run behind a reverse proxy with HTTPS
Quick Start Example
const express = require('express'); const cors = require('cors'); const helmet = require('helmet'); const app = express(); // Middleware app.use(helmet()); app.use(cors()); app.use(express.json()); // Routes app.get('/api/items', async (req, res, next) => { try { const items = await Item.findAll(); res.json({ items }); } catch (err) { next(err); } }); app.post('/api/items', async (req, res, next) => { try { const { name, price } = req.body; const item = await Item.create({ name, price }); res.status(201).json(item); } catch (err) { next(err); } }); // 404 handler app.use((req, res) => { res.status(404).json({ error: 'Not found' }); }); // Error middleware (must have 4 params) app.use((err, req, res, next) => { console.error(err.stack); res.status(err.status || 500).json({ error: err.message || 'Internal server error', }); }); app.listen(3000, () => console.log('Server running on port 3000'));
Async Error Wrapper
// Wrap async handlers to catch rejected promises const asyncHandler = (fn) => (req, res, next) => Promise.resolve(fn(req, res, next)).catch(next); app.get('/api/users', asyncHandler(async (req, res) => { const users = await User.findAll(); res.json(users); }));
Router Example
// routes/items.js const router = require('express').Router(); router.get('/', asyncHandler(async (req, res) => { /* ... */ })); router.post('/', asyncHandler(async (req, res) => { /* ... */ })); router.get('/:id', asyncHandler(async (req, res) => { /* ... */ })); module.exports = router; // app.js app.use('/api/items', require('./routes/items'));
Best Practices
- Separate routes and middleware into modules; use
for organizationexpress.Router() - Always wrap async handlers with try/catch or a wrapper to avoid unhandled rejections
- Use
for security headers and configure CORS for production originshelmet - Deploy behind a reverse proxy (nginx) with HTTPS in production
- Use
for request logging and structured error responsesmorgan
Reference
- Official documentation: https://expressjs.com/
Keywords
express, Node.js, middleware, routing, REST API, error handling, async, helmet, cors