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@twy-gmbh/erc725-playground

v0.1.29

Published

This is only used for experimentation with the Solidity-Ecosystem. Nothing to see here.

Downloads

39

Readme

ERC-725 Playground

NPM Package Build Status Conventional Commits

Do not use this yet.

Most of the sourcecode of the contracts comes from https://github.com/ERC725Alliance/ERC725/tree/master/implementations.

This is just an experimentation / learning space for Solidity, Typechain and Hardhat.

Compile

npm run build

Publish a new version

npm run release

Tests

How to run all the tests

jest

Watch mode:

jest --watch

Conventional commits

The Conventional Commits specification is a lightweight convention on top of commit messages. It provides an easy set of rules for creating an explicit commit history; which makes it easier to write automated tools on top of. This convention dovetails with SemVer, by describing the features, fixes, and breaking changes made in commit messages.

The commit message should be structured as follows:


<type>[optional scope]: <description>

[optional body]

[optional footer(s)]

  1. fix: a commit of the type fix patches a bug in your codebase (this correlates with PATCH in semantic versioning).
  2. feat: a commit of the type feat introduces a new feature to the codebase (this correlates with MINOR in semantic versioning).
  3. BREAKING CHANGE: a commit that has a footer BREAKING CHANGE:, or appends a ! after the type/scope, introduces a breaking API change (correlating with MAJOR in semantic versioning). A BREAKING CHANGE can be part of commits of any type.
  4. types other than fix: and feat: are allowed, for example @commitlint/config-conventional (based on the the Angular convention) recommends build:, chore:, ci:, docs:, style:, refactor:, perf:, test:, and others.
  5. footers other than BREAKING CHANGE: <description> may be provided and follow a convention similar to git trailer format.

Additional types are not mandated by the Conventional Commits specification, and have no implicit effect in semantic versioning (unless they include a BREAKING CHANGE). A scope may be provided to a commit's type, to provide additional contextual information and is contained within parenthesis, e.g., feat(parser): add ability to parse arrays.