Valid numbers for ports (regardless of the programming language) are: 0 to 2^16-1 = 0 to 65535
That is because a port number is 16 bit length.
However ports are divided into:
Well-known ports: 0 to 1023 (used for system services e.g. HTTP, FTP, SSH, DHCP ...)
Registered/user ports: 1024 to 49151 (you can use it for your server, but be careful some famous applications: like Microsoft SQL Server database management system (MSSQL) server or Apache Derby Network Server are already taking from this range i.e. it is not recommended to assign the port of MSSQL to your server otherwise if MSSQL is running then your server most probably will not run because of port conflict )
Dynamic/private ports: 49152 to 65535. (not used for the servers rather the clients e.g. in NATing service)
In programming you can use any numbers 0 to 65535 for your server, however you should stick to the ranges mentioned above, otherwise some system services or some applications will not run because of port conflict.
Check the list of most ports here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_TCP_and_UDP_port_numbers