Book Image

Blockchain Quick Reference

By : Mariko Amekodommo, Brenn Hill, Samanyu Chopra, Paul Valencourt
Book Image

Blockchain Quick Reference

By: Mariko Amekodommo, Brenn Hill, Samanyu Chopra, Paul Valencourt

Overview of this book

Blockchain Quick Reference takes you through the electrifying world of blockchain technology and is designed for those who want to polish their existing knowledge regarding the various pillars of the blockchain ecosystem. This book is your go-to guide, teaching you how to apply principles and ideas for making your life and business better. You will cover the architecture, Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs), tokens, smart contracts, and terminologies of the blockchain technology, before studying how they work. All you need is a curious mind to get started with blockchain technology. Once you have grasped the basics, you will explore components of Ethereum, such as ether tokens, transactions, and smart contracts, in order to build simple Dapps. You will then move on to learning why Solidity is used specifically for Ethereum-based projects, followed by exploring different types of blockchain with easy-to-follow examples. All this will help you tackle challenges and problems. By the end of this book, you will not only have solved current and future problems relating to blockchain technology but will also be able to build efficient decentralized applications.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)

Why smart contracts?

The world before smart contracts was one that was fraught with uncertainty. Legal contracts, even simple ones, need not be followed, and the cost of recourse using most legal systems was and is extremely expensive, even in countries where the legal system is not corrupt. In many areas of the world, contracts are barely worth the paper they are written on, and are usually enforceable only by parties with substantial political or financial power. For weaker actors in an economic or political system, this is a terrible and unfair set of circumstances.

The issues that we mentioned previously come primarily from the human factor. As long as a person is involved in the enforcement of a contract, they can be corrupt, lazy, misinformed, biased, and so on. A smart contract, in contrast, is written in code, and is meant to execute faithfully no matter what parties are...