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Blockchain Developer's Guide

You're reading from   Blockchain Developer's Guide Develop smart applications with Blockchain technologies - Ethereum, JavaScript, Hyperledger Fabric, and Corda

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Product type Course
Published in Dec 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781789954722
Length 564 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
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Authors (4):
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Paul Valencourt Paul Valencourt
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Paul Valencourt
Brenn Hill Brenn Hill
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Brenn Hill
Narayan Prusty Narayan Prusty
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Narayan Prusty
Samanyu Chopra Samanyu Chopra
Author Profile Icon Samanyu Chopra
Samanyu Chopra
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Table of Contents (37) Chapters Close

Title Page
Copyright
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
1. Blockchain 101 FREE CHAPTER 2. Components and Structure of Blockchain 3. Decentralization Versus Distributed Systems 4. Cryptography and Mechanics Behind Blockchain 5. Bitcoin 6. Altcoins 7. Achieving Consensus 8. Advanced Blockchain Concepts 9. Cryptocurrency Wallets 10. Alternate Blockchains 11. Hyperledger and Enterprise Blockchains 12. Ethereum 101 13. Solidity 101 14. Smart Contracts 15. Ethereum Accounts and Ether Tokens 16. Decentralized Applications 17. Mining 18. ICO 101 19. Creating Your Own Currency 20. Scalability and Other Challenges 21. Future of Blockchain 22. Understanding Decentralized Applications 23. Understanding How Ethereum Works 24. Writing Smart Contracts 25. Getting Started with web3.js 26. Building a Wallet Service 27. Building a Smart Contract Deployment Platform 28. Building a Betting App 29. Building Enterprise Level Smart Contracts 30. Building a Consortium Blockchain 1. Other Books You May Enjoy Index

Calculating a transaction's nonce


For the accounts maintained by geth, we don't need to worry about the transaction nonce because geth can add the correct nonce to the transactions and sign them. While using accounts that aren't managed by geth, we need to calculate the nonce ourselves.

 

 

To calculate the nonce ourselves, we can use the getTransactionCount method provided by geth. The first argument should be the address whose transaction count we need and the second argument is the block until we need the transaction count. We can provide the "pending" string as the block to include transactions from the block that's currently being mined. As we discussed in an earlier chapter, geth maintains a transaction pool in which it keeps pending and queued transactions. To mine a block, geth takes the pending transactions from the transaction pool and starts mining the new block. Until the block is not mined, the pending transactions remain in the transaction pool and once mined, the mined transactions...

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