solidity
l2beat
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solidity | l2beat | |
---|---|---|
103 | 628 | |
22,263 | 457 | |
2.0% | 5.9% | |
9.8 | 9.9 | |
5 days ago | 2 days ago | |
C++ | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | 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.
solidity
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How to Register a Smart Contract to Mode SFS with Thirdweb
Have a basic understanding of Solidity.
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Smart Contract Programming Languages: sCrypt vs. Solidity
Solidity Solidity emerged as the first-ever programming language for smart contracts and remains the most extensively utilized language in the Web3 space due to its first-mover advantage. It serves as the primary language for developing applications today on Ethereum and Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) compatible blockchains, including Binance Smart Chain and Tron.
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Top Paying Programming Technologies 2024
40. Solidity - $72,656
- Projects to contribute to
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How I Contributed One Line of Code to Ethereum
Solidity - Smart contract programming language.
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Optimize Your Web3 DevOps with User Feedback Forms
The cool part is that the entire feedback process employs its own factory contract written in Solidity, without requiring you to create or maintain your own smart contract.
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a solidity compiler observation that does not make any sense, anyone knows why?
Inconsistent gas usage for conversion of calldata to memory in external call and internal call. · Issue #14444 · ethereum/solidity (github.com)
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Solidity version 0.8.20 has been released!
There is a new PUSH0 opcode that allows to directly push 0 onto the EVM stack. You can checkout the change log here - https://github.com/ethereum/solidity/releases/tag/v0.8.20
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Solidity v0.8.20 was just released!
💾: https://github.com/ethereum/solidity/releases/tag/v0.8.20
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How to Build on Linea - a zk-rollup on Ethereum
In this article, we’ll explore what makes Linea so exciting. Then, we’ll walk through a tutorial on how to build a dapp on the Linea testnet. Finally, we’ll create our own cryptocurrency on Linea using Solidity, MetaMask, and Truffle: all mature ecosystem tools that are used by blockchain developers to build dapps.
l2beat
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Spot Bitcoin ETF receives official approval from the SEC
A real layer 2 would look more like something built on Ethereum (can see all its L2s at https://l2beat.com).
Essentially it's a separate network that every few minutes takes every transaction and compresses it into a data blob that it saves on Ethereum along with a proof that the computation was done correctly. The Ethereum L1 nodes then only need to verify the proof instead of re-executing all transactions that happened on the L2.
With this design users can go straight from an exchange like Coinbase onto the L2 and never need to use Ethereum, and fees are 10x cheaper because of the data compression. Fees will soon be 100x cheaper as Ethereum is adding extra space just for these L2 data blobs that is much cheaper than normal Ethereum data space.
Unfortunately it can't be done on Bitcoin right now because Bitcoin nodes don't have Turing complete scripting and so can't verify the proof that an L2 posts to Bitcoin.
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Ask HN: Who is hiring? (December 2023)
We are running & maintaining the site (https://l2beat.com). Our work is to look on the current Layer 2 deployments on Ethereum & show risks and statistics to the end user. Very interesting thing is that we are a public goods company trying to stay as objective as possible in the industry full of subjectivity. What I mostly like in this job is that I am a part of the project shaping how it looks, not only mindlessly taking someones orders.
Candidate:
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Should Ethereum be okay with enshrining more things in the protocol?
Ecosystem fragmentation is not necessarily a bad thing. It leads to rapid development through competition. Different L2s are competing against each other to provide the best service and that has lead to a cambrian explosion of solutions. It's also a very effective way to explore the solution space, I'm sure many will disappear, others will get eaten, and at some point there will be consolidation. But all this seems like a good approach early on when tackling complex problems for which the ideal trade-offs are not entirely obvious. Explore as much of the solution space as possible and trim later on.
A perhaps more pernicious problem is liquidity fragmentation. Moving assets between L2s is a tedious friction that leads to fragmentation of liquidity. In that respect, zero-knowledge rollups present a big advantage as you can share liquidity between them as long as they share some zk-circuits that allow to prove statements to both chains. All this is being very actively worked on. And the technology behind it is short of fascinating. The typical HN audience would have a huge hard-on for it, if they didn't have such a strong preconception against crypto-anything.
If anyone is curious to learn more about L2s a good starting point is here: https://l2beat.com/
And if you want to see Ethereum scaling progress you can check it here: https://l2beat.com/scaling/activity
The next major upgrade to the protocol, slated for late this year or early 2024 (date is not finalized yet), will focus on scalability by making L2 activity veeery cheap.
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"Exploring Layer 2 Solutions: Seeking insights into the current landscape and optimal choices for developers and entrepreneurs."
These two links will give you a lot of the info you need to compare L2s: https://l2beat.com/ and https://www.growthepie.xyz/ - enjoy.
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Ethereum rollups have hit the milestone of $10bn of assets and 2 million weekly active users! Scaling and adoption is finally here.
Source: https://l2beat.com
- Polygon (MATIC) Shakes Up Leadership: Potential Game Changer Incoming
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Daily General Discussion - June 7, 2023
Thanks! l2beat.com is the best.
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Are Layer 2s as secure as Layer 1?
In addition to what others said, I always find https://l2beat.com useful to see a summary of the security assumptions behind the various L2s. Currently, all L2 need to be trusted to some extent as they are still quite in development.
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Ethereum liquid staking protocol Rocket Pool deploys on zkSync Era
Exponential.fi has good summaries and links to the projects. And https://l2beat.com is also great for judging L2s.
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Next big Eth upgrade
Take a careful look at https://l2beat.com
What are some alternatives?
nvim-lspconfig - Quickstart configs for Nvim LSP
l2-fees
awesome-blockchain-rust - Collect libraries and packages about blockchain/cryptography in Rust
awesome-starknet - A curated list of awesome StarkNet resources, libraries, tools and more
kotlin - The Kotlin Programming Language.
crypto-fees - Website for comparing total daily fees of various blockchain protocols.
Elixir - Elixir is a dynamic, functional language for building scalable and maintainable applications
opensea-js - TypeScript SDK for the OpenSea marketplace
openzeppelin-contracts - OpenZeppelin Contracts is a library for secure smart contract development.
polygon-edge - A Framework for Building Ethereum-compatible Blockchain Networks
swift - The Swift Programming Language
consensus-specs - Ethereum Proof-of-Stake Consensus Specifications