foundry
openQA
foundry | openQA | |
---|---|---|
39 | 52 | |
7,558 | 304 | |
1.3% | 0.0% | |
9.9 | 9.8 | |
4 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Rust | Perl | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
foundry
- I need to buy goETH
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Any tool for committing the same change across multiple repos?
I realize that I want that change applied to all of my projects which use the same stack (e.g. all of my Solidity projects built with Foundry)
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Foundry: add a cheatcode
We scratched the surface of Foundry’s code in part 1. Let’s go a bit deeper and try to create a new cheatcode this time.
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Where are some of the best places to learn about Smart Contracts?
Also learning how to use one of these development environments instead of Remix is necessary: 1. Hardhat: https://hardhat.org 2. Foundry: https://github.com/foundry-rs/foundry
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Foundry: open source contribution
I just made my first (really small) contribution to Foundry (a toolkit to help develop smart contracts for Ethereum) today, and I really enjoyed it! 😍
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Few solidity development questions
Check out Foundry. It's faster and better than Hardhat IMO.
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Build Your First Subnet
After you feel comfortable with this deployment flow, try deploying smart contracts on your chain with Remix, Hardhat, or Foundry. You can also experiment with customizing your Subnet by addingprecompiles or adjusting the airdrop.
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Secure Smart Contract Tools—An End-to-End Developer’s Guide
Foundry
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How to develop and deploy smart contracts with Foundry & Openzeppelin
Forge: Ethereum testing framework (like Truffle, Hardhat, and DappTools).
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Remix IDE vs Truffle
Also check out foundry, definitely a different approach but doesn't use Javascript, you do most of your actions in solidity.
openQA
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How to view which packages will be in the next snapshot on tumbleweed?
I sometimes look at https://openqa.opensuse.org/ when I'm excited for a new package release (example, kernel 6.5) just to see how far along the next snapshot is. While this is interesting, I can't seem to figure out which packages will be in the snapshot when I do this.
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What distro do you use and recommend?
anyway, one great thing about SUSE is openqa.opensuse.org/ which does automatic testing that updates work before releasing....and every pkgs is build using Open Build Service (OBS) which is great as that makes sure Distro has more consistent/automatic binary built
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make me one of yours
I use Tumbleweed since years and although rolling, its more stable than Pop ever was for me. Stable in the sense of daily use and upgrading in particular. Every update you get on OpenSuse is, as a TLDR version of an explanation, run through an automated AI process that checks if everything works, only then the update is pushed out. The AI analyzes pictures of the OS to check. For example, it goes through the boot process and sees if it works, then clicks on certain apps like yast and see if they open, comparing whats shown on screen with a reference picture. You can see whats currently going on in terms of testing here.
- PSA: Flatpaks are currently broken on Fedora. Here's a temporary solution.
- Segmentation fault when starting Nautilus on snapshot 20230616
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Is anyone else concerned about the future of OpenSUSE Leap/ALP?
I value Greg KH's Tumbleweed. It does everything I want. Thanks to build.opensuse.org and openqa.opensuse.org . If I had to start from scratch, MicroOs, I would learn along the way.
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Looking for a distro to teach Linux to teenagers
Rolling release players? openSUSE Tumbleweed (backed/tested by OpenQA before released), EndeavourOS (Arch with an installer; however, this could be too advanced when it breaks)
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Advice on Distro / DE
I would recommend openSUSE (KDE) tumbleweed you get the newest pkgs and they are well tested and they have great tools like openQA, obs, YaST etc. and if you have issue with any updates you can easily just rollback to latest working snapshot
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OpenSUSE vs Arch for gaming?
And even though Arch stability heavily depends on the user and package maintainers doing everything right (I'm looking at you TimeShift), openSUSE, being backed by a company, have way more resources and robust infrastructure for ensuring their system is stable than Arch does (I have said this a couple of times, SUSE's openQA is incredible).
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Reliable distro for work with new KDE
Tumbleweed is very current - well, as current as your last update.g/ This means that it's very rare that something is rolled out to the community that hasn't been tested as working.
What are some alternatives?
hardhat - Hardhat is a development environment to compile, deploy, test, and debug your Ethereum software.
UnrealTournamentPatches
truffle - :warning: The Truffle Suite is being sunset. For information on ongoing support, migration options and FAQs, visit the Consensys blog. Thank you for all the support over the years.
quickemu - Quickly create and run optimised Windows, macOS and Linux desktop virtual machines.
hevm - Dapp, Seth, Hevm, and more
min-sized-rust - 🦀 How to minimize Rust binary size 📦
ds-test - Assertions, equality checks and other test helpers
open-build-service - Build and distribute Linux packages from sources in an automatic, consistent and reproducible way #obs
zksync - zkSync: trustless scaling and privacy engine for Ethereum
tumbleweed-cli - Command line interface for interacting with Tumbleweed snapshots.
ethers-rs - Complete Ethereum & Celo library and wallet implementation in Rust. https://docs.rs/ethers
digga - A flake utility library to craft shell-, home-, and hosts- environments.