Book Image

Mastering Blockchain Programming with Solidity

By : Jitendra Chittoda
Book Image

Mastering Blockchain Programming with Solidity

By: Jitendra Chittoda

Overview of this book

Solidity is among the most popular and contract-oriented programming languages used for writing decentralized applications (DApps) on Ethereum blockchain. If you’re looking to perfect your skills in writing professional-grade smart contracts using Solidity, this book can help. You will get started with a detailed introduction to blockchain, smart contracts, and Ethereum, while also gaining useful insights into the Solidity programming language. A dedicated section will then take you through the different Ethereum Request for Comments (ERC) standards, including ERC-20, ERC-223, and ERC-721, and demonstrate how you can choose among these standards while writing smart contracts. As you approach later chapters, you will cover the different smart contracts available for use in libraries such as OpenZeppelin. You’ll also learn to use different open source tools to test, review and improve the quality of your code and make it production-ready. Toward the end of this book, you’ll get to grips with techniques such as adding security to smart contracts, and gain insights into various security considerations. By the end of this book, you will have the skills you need to write secure, production-ready smart contracts in Solidity from scratch for decentralized applications on Ethereum blockchain.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Getting Started with Blockchain, Ethereum, and Solidity
5
Section 2: Deep Dive into Development Tools
9
Section 3: Mastering ERC Standards and Libraries
16
Section 4: Design Patterns and Best Practices

Summary

In this chapter, we covered best practices such as avoiding floating pragma, the commit-reveal scheme, using external function calls, and integer rounding errors. Additionally, we discussed attack patterns such as front-running, reentrancy, signature replay attacks, and integer overflow and underflow attacks. These are the most important things to know, as writing contracts in Solidity can be easy, but writing a bulletproof contract is hard.

There have been many hacks, and we have covered some of the most well-known ones, but it's the developer's responsibility to keep checking for newly identified attack patterns, so that they do not make the same mistakes again while writing contracts. Apart from that, always use the latest versions of the libraries. The Solidity compiler does fix the issues in the new versions; keep yourself up to date with the latest...