I got this information by visiting and looking at the comment by Vladimir Krivosheev on Jat 6:52 am. Once you've done this, you should be able to go to and absolute URLs should work.īut as lena suggested, I would opt in for a local web server setup (Apache, MAMP, WAMP, etc) to host your web project since WebStorm's Built-in Server is very basic and doesn't address this use case. Then, you would set a custom port for the Built-in Server by going to Settings -> Debugger -> JavaScript -> Built-in server port 8090 (on older versions of WebStorm) or by going to Settings -> Build, Execution, Deployment -> Debugger -> Built-in server port 8090 (on newer versions of WebStorm). In your case, you would change the line 127.0.0.1 localhost to 127.0.0.1 ProjectName. I am able to access it from Chrome and Firefox browsers using localhost but not with my PCs ip address. WebStorm integrates with Node.js providing assistance in configuring, editing, running, debugging, testing, profiling, and maintaining your applications. You can find a list of useful sites and resources including blogs, social media sites, utilities, guides, tutorials, newsletters, tools, and more in our /r/frontend wiki.The only "workaround" I'm aware of in order to use WebStorm's Built-in Server with absolute URLs is to edit your /etc/hosts file (on Mac/Linux) or C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts file (on Windows). I installed WebStorm on my PC and started NodeJS server. You can run multiple personal licensed copies at the same time (like on laptop and desktop for remote debugging client/server apps) as long as you are the only user of your personal license. Node.js is a lightweight runtime environment for executing JavaScript outside the browser, for example, on the server or in the command line. Therefore, some lenience is allowed in the type of posts that may seem more back-end oriented so long as their emphasis seems to be in the spirit of the subreddit. Nowadays, the field of front end development is evolving at such a rapid pace that sometimes it's difficult to say what is frontend and what isn't. For it to be valid and related to frontend it should be accompanied by the open source repo, and the context of the post should be around the frontend of your project, not the project idea. No posting your project without the source or repo We get it, you guys build some cool things, but this isn't r/sideproject or another sub for getting praise and onboarding users."It's perfectly fine to be a redditor with a website, it's not okay to be a website with a reddit account." - Confucius
Web-focused application architecture and development.Page-load performance optimization and perceived speed.Registration data and configuration in a single directory. Responsive/mobile design and optimization Move to WebStorm from IntelliJ IDEA, PhpStorm, P圜harm, or another JetBrains IDE. License server completely customizable via environment variables.Neat new stuff like canvas, web sockets/workers, audio, etc.JavaScript frameworks, libraries and microlibs (BackboneJS, AngularJS, Knockout, Ember, jQuery, Zepto, and on.).Here's the kinds of things you'll find (and should post about) here:
If you're looking to find or share the latest and greatest tips, links, thoughts, and discussions on the world of front web development, this is the place to do it.
r/frontend is a subreddit for front end web developers who want to move the web forward or want to learn how. Are you beyond (or want to be beyond) the days of href="javascript:void(0)"? Does the idea of having HTML templates inside of a MySQL database make you nervous? Do you love making beautiful, modern websites? Then /r/frontend is for you.