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Blockchain By Example

Blockchain By Example

By : Badr, Horrocks, Xun (Brian) Wu
4 (2)
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Blockchain By Example

Blockchain By Example

4 (2)
By: Badr, Horrocks, Xun (Brian) Wu

Overview of this book

The Blockchain is a revolution promising a new world without middlemen. Technically, it is an immutable and tamper-proof distributed ledger of all transactions across a peer-to-peer network. With this book, you will get to grips with the blockchain ecosystem to build real-world projects. This book will walk you through the process of building multiple blockchain projects with different complexity levels and hurdles. Each project will teach you just enough about the field's leading technologies, Bitcoin, Ethereum, Quorum, and Hyperledger in order to be productive from the outset. As you make your way through the chapters, you will cover the major challenges that are associated with blockchain ecosystems such as scalability, integration, and distributed file management. In the concluding chapters, you’ll learn to build blockchain projects for business, run your ICO, and even create your own cryptocurrency. Blockchain by Example also covers a range of projects such as Bitcoin payment systems, supply chains on Hyperledger, and developing a Tontine Bank Every is using Ethereum. By the end of this book, you will not only be able to tackle common issues in the blockchain ecosystem, but also design and build reliable and scalable distributed systems.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
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What is an ICO?

During an ICO on Ethereum, participants send ether to a special smart contract, and, in return, receive tokens of equal value, depending on the price of the token set at the start of the sale.

In Ethereum, a token is just a balance itself just a number stored in a smart contract and associated with an owner's wallet address. A minimal implementation of a token would therefore only require a way to store how many tokens a given address owns. In Solidity, this can be achieved simply by using a mapping:

mapping (address => uint256) balances;

It's important to note that a token isn't something that resides in a user's wallet, nor is it something that can be moved around. When a user sees a token in their wallet, the wallet software is really making a call into the token contract and reading the balance associated with its address...

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