Book Image

Electron Projects

By : Denys Vuika
Book Image

Electron Projects

By: Denys Vuika

Overview of this book

The Electron framework allows you to use modern web technologies to build applications that share the same code across all operating systems and platforms. This also helps designers to easily transition from the web to the desktop. Electron Projects guides you through building cross-platform Electron apps with modern web technologies and JavaScript frameworks such as Angular, React.js, and Vue.js. You’ll explore the process of configuring modern JavaScript frameworks and UI libraries, real-time analytics and automatic updates, and interactions with the operating system. You’ll get hands-on with building a basic Electron app, before moving on to implement a Markdown Editor. In addition to this, you’ll be able to experiment with major JavaScript frameworks such as Angular and Vue.js, discovering ways to integrate them with Electron apps for building cross-platform desktop apps. Later, you’ll learn to build a screenshot snipping tool, a mini-game, and a music player, while also gaining insights into analytics, bug tracking, and licensing. You’ll then get to grips with building a chat app, an eBook generator and finally a simple digital wallet app. By the end of this book, you’ll have experience in building a variety of projects and project templates that will help you to apply your knowledge when creating your own cross-platform applications.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)

Showing our account balance

At this point, you have a few accounts in the local Ethereum node. We have also managed to render a tree of account names so that our users can see all of them in the user interface.

Given that each account may contain various amounts of money, it is very important to allow users to see the balance of each account from the application.

Using the following steps, we are going to wire the account tree component to the main content area and display the balance of the selected account:

  1. Introduce a pair of hooks for the current account balance:
function App() {
const [node, setNode] = useState('Unknown Node');
const [accounts, setAccounts] = useState([]);
const [balance, setBalance] = useState(0);

// ....
}

To get the balance of a particular account, you need to use the web3.eth.getBalance API from the Web3 library. This means we need a selection...