Book Image

Hands-On Blockchain for Python Developers

By : Arjuna Sky Kok
Book Image

Hands-On Blockchain for Python Developers

By: Arjuna Sky Kok

Overview of this book

Blockchain is seen as the main technological solution that works as a public ledger for all cryptocurrency transactions. This book serves as a practical guide to developing a full-fledged decentralized application with Python to interact with the various building blocks of blockchain applications. Hands-On Blockchain for Python Developers starts by demonstrating how blockchain technology and cryptocurrency hashing works. You will understand the fundamentals and benefits of smart contracts such as censorship resistance and transaction accuracy. As you steadily progress, you'll go on to build smart contracts using Vyper, which has a similar syntax to Python. This experience will further help you unravel the other benefits of smart contracts, including reliable storage and backup, and efficiency. You'll also use web3.py to interact with smart contracts and leverage the power of both the web3.py and Populus framework to build decentralized applications that offer security and seamless integration with cryptocurrencies. As you explore later chapters, you'll learn how to create your own token on top of Ethereum and build a cryptocurrency wallet graphical user interface (GUI) that can handle Ethereum and Ethereum Request for Comments (ERC-20) tokens using the PySide2 library. This will enable users to seamlessly store, send, and receive digital money. Toward the end, you'll implement InterPlanetary File System (IPFS) technology in your decentralized application to provide a peer-to-peer filesystem that can store and expose media. By the end of this book, you'll be well-versed in blockchain programming and be able to build end-to-end decentralized applications on a range of domains using Python.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Blockchain and Smart Contracts
5
Section 2: Web3 and Populus
9
Section 3: Frontend Decentralized Applications
11
Section 4: Cryptocurrency and Wallets
14
Section 5: Decentralized Filesystem

Summary

In this chapter, we have familiarized ourselves with the tabbed view, size policy, and the grid layout of PySide2. Then, we also learned how to test Qt applications. Next, we started to build a desktop cryptocurrency wallet. We divided the application into many parts: the blockchain, the thread, the widget, the identicon tool, and the test. The blockchain part of the cryptocurrency wallet is based on the web3 and Populus libraries and its purpose is to read and create transactions in the blockchain. The thread is a middleman between the UI part and the blockchain object when creating a transaction. The identicon tool is used to create an avatar image based on a specific string (usually the address of the account or the token smart contract's address). The widget part is a tabbed widget that has three tabs. The first tab is the account widget, the second tab is the...