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The Essential Guide to Web3

You're reading from   The Essential Guide to Web3 Develop, deploy, and manage distributed applications on the Ethereum network

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801813471
Length 366 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Vijay Krishnan Vijay Krishnan
Author Profile Icon Vijay Krishnan
Vijay Krishnan
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Toc

Table of Contents (25) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1 – Introduction to Web3 FREE CHAPTER
2. Chapter 1: Fundamentals of Blockchain and Web3 3. Chapter 2: Getting Started With Ethereum 4. Chapter 3: Your First Ethereum Transaction 5. Part 2 – All about Smart Contracts
6. Chapter 4: Introduction to Smart Contracts 7. Chapter 5: Creating and Deploying Your First Smart Contract 8. Chapter 6: Smart Contract Security and Access Controls 9. Part 3 – Writing Your DApps for Web3
10. Chapter 7: Developer Tools and Libraries for Web3 Development 11. Chapter 8: Writing and Testing Your First dApp on Web3 12. Part 4 – Fungible Tokens
13. Chapter 9: Introduction to Tokenization 14. Chapter 10: Creating Your First Token 15. Part 5 – Non-Fungible Tokens
16. Chapter 11: Non-Fungible Token Standards 17. Chapter 12: Creating Your First Non-Fungible Token 18. Part 6 – Web3 Advanced Topics
19. Chapter 13: Understanding Oracles 20. Chapter 14: Zero-Knowledge Proofs and Zero-Knowledge EVMs 21. Chapter 15: L2 Networks and Rollups 22. Chapter 16: Decentralized Autonomous Organizations – Overview 23. Index 24. Other Books You May Enjoy

Summary

This wraps up a long chapter with a lot of Solidity-related topics. We covered various topics related to Solidity programming language and smart contract development. We discussed Solidity data types, including boolean, integer, address, and byte arrays, and their usage in smart contract development. We also covered Solidity contract types, including fixed-size and dynamic-size byte arrays, string literals and types, and enumerated types, explaining their definitions and how they are used. We also discussed Solidity storage and memory, including how they differ and how they are used in smart contract development.

Furthermore, we discussed Solidity smart contract events and logs, as well as their importance in debugging and monitoring smart contracts. We also explained how smart contract ABIs are used to interact with smart contracts.

Finally we discussed the importance to use factory contracts like simple factory and proxy factory contracts.

Overall, this chapter provided...

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