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Solidity Programming Essentials

Solidity Programming Essentials

By : Modi
3.6 (8)
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Solidity Programming Essentials

Solidity Programming Essentials

3.6 (8)
By: Modi

Overview of this book

Solidity is a high-level language for writing smart contracts, and the syntax has large similarities with JavaScript, thereby making it easier for developers to learn, design, compile, and deploy smart contracts on large blockchain ecosystems including Ethereum and Polygon among others. This book guides you in understanding Solidity programming from scratch. The book starts with step-by-step instructions for the installation of multiple tools and private blockchain, along with foundational concepts such as variables, data types, and programming constructs. You’ll then explore contracts based on an object-oriented paradigm, including the usage of constructors, interfaces, libraries, and abstract contracts. The following chapters help you get to grips with testing and debugging smart contracts. As you advance, you’ll learn about advanced concepts like assembly programming, advanced interfaces, usage of recovery, and error handling using try-catch blocks. You’ll also explore multiple design patterns for smart contracts alongside developing secure smart contracts, as well as gain a solid understanding of writing upgradable smart concepts and data modeling. Finally, you’ll discover how to create your own ERC20 and NFT tokens from scratch. By the end of this book, you will be able to write, deploy, and test smart contracts in Ethereum.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
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1
Part 1: The Fundamentals of Solidity and Ethereum
7
Part 2: Writing Robust Smart Contracts
13
Part 3: Advanced Smart Contracts

Exception handling

Errors are a fact of life in the programming world. They are often inadvertently introduced while writing contracts and therefore writing error-free contracts is a desired skill. These errors can occur either at design time or runtime. Solidity is compiled into bytecode as part of compilation and the compiler checks for any syntax errors during this process. Runtime errors, however, are more difficult to catch and generally occur while executing contracts. It is important to test the contract for possible runtime errors, but it is more important to write defensive and robust contracts that take care of both design-time and runtime errors. Some examples of runtime errors are out-of-gas errors, divide-by-zero errors, data-type-overflow errors, and array-out-of-index errors.

Until version 4.10 of Solidity, there was a single throw statement available for error handling. Developers had to write multiple if...else statements to check the values and throw in the case...

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