Book Image

Blockchain Developer's Guide

By : Brenn Hill, Samanyu Chopra, Paul Valencourt, Narayan Prusty
Book Image

Blockchain Developer's Guide

By: Brenn Hill, Samanyu Chopra, Paul Valencourt, Narayan Prusty

Overview of this book

Blockchain applications provide a single-shared ledger to eliminate trust issues involving multiple stakeholders. It is the main technical innovation of Bitcoin, where it serves as the public ledger for Bitcoin transactions. Blockchain Developer's Guide takes you through the electrifying world of blockchain technology. It begins with the basic design of a blockchain and elaborates concepts, such as Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs), tokens, smart contracts, and other related terminologies. You will then explore the components of Ethereum, such as Ether tokens, transactions, and smart contracts that you need to build simple DApps. Blockchain Developer's Guide also explains why you must specifically use Solidity for Ethereum-based projects and lets you explore different blockchains with easy-to-follow examples. You will learn a wide range of concepts - beginning with cryptography in cryptocurrencies and including ether security, mining, and smart contracts. You will learn how to use web sockets and various API services for Ethereum. By the end of this Learning Path, you will be able to build efficient decentralized applications. This Learning Path includes content from the following Packt products: • Blockchain Quick Reference by Brenn Hill, Samanyu Chopra, Paul Valencourt • Building Blockchain Projects by Narayan Prusty
Table of Contents (37 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
Index

What are event topics?


Topics are values used for indexing events. You cannot search for events without topics. Whenever an event is invoked, a default topic is generated, which is considered the first topic of the event. There can be up to four topics for an event. Topics are always generated in the same order. You can search for an event using one or more of its topics.

The first topic is the signature of the event. The rest of the three topics are the values of indexed parameters. If the index parameter is string, bytes, or array, then the keccak-256 hash of it is the topic instead.

Let's take an example to understand topics. Suppose there is an event of this form:

event ping(string indexed a, int indexed b, uint256 indexed c, string d, int e); 

//invocation of event 
ping("Random String", 12, 23, "Random String", 45);

Here, these four topics are generated. They are as follows:

  • 0xb62a11697c0f56e93f3957c088d492b505b9edd7fb6e7872a93b41cdb2020644: This is the first topic. It is generated using...