hardhat-template
awesome-solidity
hardhat-template | awesome-solidity | |
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5 | 13 | |
1,919 | 6,350 | |
- | - | |
6.8 | 4.8 | |
about 2 months ago | 3 months ago | |
TypeScript | ||
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.
hardhat-template
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Foundry vs. Hardhat template?
It seems like every single week, I see things about Foundry. As someone that has been using a fairly standard Hardhat template for my projects the past year, I feel like this gets the job done, but I am wondering what I am missing?
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Basic beginner questions concerning smart contracts and dApp front-end code organization
To help getting started easier I am looking into some boilerplate starter kits such as https://github.com/paulrberg/solidity-template etc. Basic question, but what is the best practice in terms of organizing your smart contract dev stuff such as .sol files, hardhat, solhint, solcover, etc. with your front-end (website) dApp code? Do you keep everything in one repository? Do you keep them separated? The front-end part (let's say Sveltekit for example) and ethers.js need the ABI json right? When you deploy your front-end website and are keeping everything in one repo, should you exclude your contract files from the build? I suppose the JS framework will already exclude folders like /contracts that are in the root from the build.
- Web3.0 Resources
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Confused by Web3 and best practices
I also really like this template for a web3+React website with a simple connect button: https://github.com/PaulRBerg/solidity-template
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I feel lost. (New Dev)
..and if you are looking for a general toolchain I really love the starter template here: https://github.com/PaulRBerg/solidity-template
awesome-solidity
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Need guidance about smart contract development and auditing
https://github.com/bkrem/awesome-solidity - a repo w literally everything
- Crazy resource for solidity and web3
- [Serio] ¿IT es nuestra Unica salvacion laboral en Mexico?
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Some Useful GitHub Repositories To Enhance Your Web3 Skills
2. Awesome Solidity
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Critique of Crypto/Web3
I am genuinely curious on useful applications for a decentralized ledger, so I skimmed this linkdump.
> https://github.com/OffcierCia/DeFi-Developer-Road-Map
Background and development information, no applications. This link, by itself, has a massive number of links.
> https://github.com/bkrem/awesome-solidity
This links is later duplicated, but is also mostly background and developer information. There is one section titled "deployed on Ethereum mainnet" which seems to be mostly dev tools again
* rarity, an MMO (example UI: https://raritymmo.com/). That's kind of cool, if unlikely to be monetizable.
- [COMPLETE NOOB HERE] Wanted to create an ERC20 token. Any no code tool you would recommend? PS, I know a token is only on one chain, but I've seen tokens on both ETH & BSC chains. I think its called wrapping. How does it work? How is price kept same? Any no code tool you would recommend? Thank you!
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Awesome Functional Programming
I like them when I am new to a technology or programming language. For example last year I spent a significant amount of time writing Go code and doing Solidity/blockchain development.
Being able to scan [awesome-go](https://github.com/avelino/awesome-go), [awesome-solidity](https://github.com/bkrem/awesome-solidity), and [awesome-nft](https://github.com/gianni-dalerta/awesome-nft) for general resources, projects, guides, or just general information was a nice resource to have in my back pocket.
I think your point is valid, but it's also a personal expectation of what you get out of the resource. I think the fact that they are open ended helps both developers who are trying to reach an audience and people who are browsing for new tools, ideas, etc.
- Web3.0 Resources
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The Hitchhiker's Guide to Blockchain Development
1. Blockchain https://cognitiveclass.ai/courses/blockchain-course https://github.com/yjjnls/awesome-blockchain https://cyprianaarons.hashnode.dev/blockchain-for-dummies-ckpihiqql02x5crs18kas0566 2. Solidity https://www.tutorialspoint.com/solidity/index.htm https://cryptozombies.io/ https://github.com/bkrem/awesome-solidity 3. Web3.js https://www.useweb3.xyz/ https://asiedu-dev.hashnode.dev/web30-a-down-to-earth-understanding-of-this-- new-raging-evolution 4. Ethereum https://www.tutorialspoint.com/ethereum/index.htm https://github.com/ttumiel/Awesome-Ethereum https://ethereum.org/en/developers/ https://ethereum.org/en/whitepaper/ 5. Dapps https://www.dappuniversity.com/ https://medium.com/heptagon/step-by-step-guide-to-build-a-dapp-a-homo-sapiens-2-day-love-affair-with-ethereum-dapp-de2b0dea12f1 6. Nft https://nftschool.dev/ https://github.com/gianni-dalerta/awesome-nft
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What are some good open-source repositories that I can contribute to as a beginner blockchain developer?
Awesome Solidity
What are some alternatives?
prb-math - Solidity library for advanced fixed-point math
solidity - Solidity, the Smart Contract Programming Language
hardhat-gas-reporter - Gas Usage Analytics for Hardhat
awesome-web3 - List of awesome web3 resources
uniswap-v3-token-swap - example code of uniswapV3 token swaps with hardhat and ethersjs
awesome-erlang - A curated list of awesome Erlang libraries, resources and shiny things.
smart-contract-best-practices - A guide to smart contract security best practices
solang - Solidity Compiler for Solana and Polkadot
multicall-batcher - multicall with ease
full-blockchain-solidity-course-py - Ultimate Solidity, Blockchain, and Smart Contract - Beginner to Expert Full Course | Python Edition
remix - This has been moved to https://github.com/ethereum/remix-project