augur
eth-faucet
augur | eth-faucet | |
---|---|---|
7 | 1 | |
443 | 18 | |
0.0% | - | |
0.0 | 10.0 | |
about 1 year ago | about 2 years ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
augur
- Tesla is making us move to Fremont or quit. Would I get severance?
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I created a function to convert address to string, can anybody here do one better?
Not by me. But Augur has a library to convert bytes32 to string. https://github.com/AugurProject/augur/blob/master/packages/augur-core/src/contracts/libraries/BytesToString.sol
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How do I contact REP support?
Perhaps open an issue on GitHub.
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Migration stats are moving slowly. What is taking people so long?
You can verify the IPFS hash at https://github.com/AugurProject/augur/releases/, it is the beta release CIDv1 trading hash.
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REP to REPv2 Migration
You can get the IPFS hash (that big random letter thing at the start of the first link) from the Augur GitHub releases page at https://github.com/AugurProject/augur/releases/
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Is Augur down?
Yeah, I agree, the IPFS links are not user friendly if you don't know how IPFS works. And if you do know how it works, you are probably using your own local IPFS client and manually entering the hash (that long hacker looking string before the dot), which you verified yourself by looking at https://github.com/AugurProject/augur/releases
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Reporting Mode Trading Disabled
To be absolutely safe, you can install your own IPFS client: https://ipfs.io/#install , and point it at the hashes published on https://github.com/AugurProject/augur/releases
eth-faucet
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Ethereum ️ JavaScript Cheatsheet
My main idea for this article was giving a cheatsheet how to start interacting with Ethereum blockchain without reading long documentations and white papers. That's all I could do in less than 2000 words. I hope you find it useful. At the beginning I mentioned, I built an example app for this article you can find it on my Github. If you like it please give it a star on Github! Thank you.
What are some alternatives?
Sovryn-frontend - Frontend DApp for Sovryn trading and lending platform.
ethcontracts - Readymade ethereum contracts implementation with support for all ethereum library.
multisol - CLI application for verifying Solidity contracts on Etherscan
arlocal - Local testnet for your Arweave products.
MorpherWallet - Morpher Wallet is a recoverable, non-custodial wallet that runs directly in the browser. Needs zero installation and zero configuration as a keystore.
github-goerli-faucet - If you need Goerli gETH, this is the place for you. 1 gETH per user unless a proper valid reason for more gETH requirement is provided.
scaffold-eth-examples - Scaffold-Eth 🏗 examples repo
next-web3-boilerplate - Slightly opinionated Next.js Web3 boilerplate built on ethers, web3-react, Typechain, and SWR.
brownie-angular-mix - Everything you need to use Angular with Brownie!
open-nft-marketplace - An NFT Marketplace running on ethereum, binance smart chain, polygon, avalanche, fantom, optimism and arbitrum powered by 0x smart contracts. Made in React/Next JS, MUI and Typescript.
JavaScript-DEX-Triangular-Arbitrage-Bot-v4 - This is a open source project for triangular arbitrage between multiple decentralized exchanges. The project is fully functional and has proven to be highly effective. It searches for profitable trades and executes them, resulting in a profit for the user. [GET https://api.github.com/repos/DonAndMike/JavaScript-DEX-Triangular-Arbitrage-Bot-v4: 403 - Repository access blocked]