Book Image

Learn Ethereum

By : Xun (Brian) Wu, Zhihong Zou, Dongying Song
Book Image

Learn Ethereum

By: Xun (Brian) Wu, Zhihong Zou, Dongying Song

Overview of this book

Ethereum is a blockchain-based, decentralized computing platform that allows running smart contracts. This book provides a basic overview of how Ethereum works, its ecosystem, mining process, and the consensus mechanism. It also demonstrates a step-by-step approach for building decentralized applications. This book begins with the very basics of Blockchain technology. Then it dives deep into the Ethereum architecture, framework and tools in its ecosystem. It also provides you an overview of ongoing research on Ethereum, for example, Layer 1 and 2 scaling solution, Stablecoin, ICO/STO/IEO, etc. Next, it explains Solidity language in detail, and provides step-by-step instructions for designing, developing, testing, deploying, and monitoring decentralized applications. In addition, you’ll learn how to use Truffle, Remix, Infura, Metamask, and many other Ethereum technologies. It’ll also help you develop your own cryptocurrency by creating ERC20, and ERC721 smart contracts from scratch. Finally, we explain private blockchains, and you learn how to interact with smart contracts through wallets.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Blockchain and Ethereum Basics
5
Section 2: Blockchain Development Cycle
8
Section 3: Ethereum Implementations
12
Section 4: Production and Deployment
16
Section 5: Conclusion

Deploying smart contracts with testnet

We dived into details about smart contract execution under the hood in Chapter 4, Solidity Fundamentals, and learned how to develop our own cryptocurrency using smart contracts in Chapter 5, Developing Your Own Cryptocurrency. In Chapter 6, Smart Contract Development and Test Fundamentals, we showed you how to use Remix to develop and debug a smart contract. We will add a few different aspects of smart contracts here: contract accounts on Ethereum and a little background on smart contracts.

As we discussed in Chapter 9, Creating an Ethereum Private Chain, a recipient of a transaction can be an EOA or a contract account. The transaction data is considered an argument to the function. EOA is usually managed by the users through a wallet, while a contract account is handled by a smart contract—basically, a piece of code. We can get a...