@alayanetwork/web3x
v4.0.7
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Typescript port of web3.js
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web3x
Ethereum TypeScript Client Library - for perfect types and tiny builds.
Table of contents
Why?
web3.js is a very popular Ethereum library, but:
- It has inaccurate typings and there's no way to to introduce type safety to contract code.
- It's large, weighing in at ~800k uncompressed.
web3x solves the above issues and more.
- It's pure TypeScript and generates contract types from ABIs.
- It's small, with a minimum sized contract interaction weighing in at ~150k uncompressed.
- It's expanding with additional features. For example the
EvmProvider
which provides a full inplace EVM implementation for executing contract code in your DAPP for simplified development workflows.
web3x also adopts a lean, functional design, and resolves many out the outstanding issues in the web3.js repository.
Usage
There are two builds of the library. web3x
uses CommonJS style imports and is best used for Node.js backends. web3x-es
uses ES6 imports and is best used for ES6 aware tools like Webpack.
Using inbuilt providers
The inbuilt providers are all EIP-1193 compatible, and are used as follows:
import { Address } from 'web3x-es/address';
import { WebsocketProvider } from 'web3x-es/providers';
import { Eth } from 'web3x-es/eth';
import { fromWei } from 'web3x-es/utils';
async function main() {
const provider = new WebsocketProvider('wss://mainnet.infura.io/ws');
const eth = new Eth(provider);
const balance = await eth.getBalance(Address.ZERO);
document.body.innerText = `Balance of 0 address ETH: ${fromWei(balance, 'ether')}`;
}
main().catch(console.error);
Using legacy providers, e.g. MetaMask
Until MetaMask and other providers are EIP-1193 compatible, you can use them with an adapter as follows:
import { LegacyProvider, LegacyProviderAdapter } from 'web3x-es/providers';
import { Eth } from 'web3x-es/eth';
declare const web3: {
currentProvider: LegacyProvider;
};
const eth = new Eth(new LegacyProviderAdapter(web3.currentProvider));
Or a shorthand version:
import { Eth } from 'web3x-es/eth';
const eth = Eth.fromCurrentProvider();
See example projects for more complex usage examples.
Contract type safety
Interacting with contracts without type safety is tedious at best, and dangerous at worst. web3x
provides a code generator called web3x-codegen
to generate typings for contract ABIs either local, or remote from a simple configuration file called contracts.json
.
Read more at web3x-codegen.
The EVM provider
There is an implementation of the EVM which can be used for simplifying development workflows.
Read more at web3x-evm.
Differences
This is not a perfect drop in replacement for web3.js, there are differences.
- Callbacks for request/response style calls no longer supported, promises only.
- PromiEvent interface has been removed, in favour of
getTxHash()
,getReceipt()
methods. - Address objects must be used insead of strings. e.g.
Address.fromString('0x903ddd91207f737255ca93eb5885c0e087be0fc3')
- Buffers are used for keys and data instead of
0x
prefixed strings. - You should explicitly import parts of the library rather then accessing them via the web3 object.
- Sanitized some hybrid types, e.g. access wallet accounts via
wallet.get(0)
rather thanwallet[0]
.
Example projects
Two example TypeScript projects are included, one for webpack and one for node.js. They are configured to work with jest for testing. Adapting them to pure JavaScript if you don't want to use TypeScript should be trivial.
Documentation
API documentation has not yet been ported from web3.js. For now the recommended approach for familiarising yourself with the library would be the following, in preferential order:
- Read the web3.js documentation at https://web3js.readthedocs.io/en/1.0/ to familiarise yourself with its API.
- Take a look at the example projects such as the webpack example.
- Rely on your IDE and TypeScript to provide insight into the API.
- Delve into the code. It's significantly easier to follow and understand than web3.js.