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Oracle Drags Its Feet in the JavaScript Trademark Dispute
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@hirosystems/clarinet-sdk
Advanced tools
A SDK to interact with Clarity Smart Contracts in node.js
The Clarinet SDK allows to interact with the simnet in Node.js.
If you want to use the Clarinet SDK in web browsers, try @hirosystems/clarinet-sdk-browser.
Find the API references of the SDK in our documentation.
Learn more about unit testing Clarity smart contracts in this guide.
You can use this SDK to:
npm install @hirosystems/clarinet-sdk
import { initSimnet } from "@hirosystems/clarinet-sdk";
import { Cl } from "@stacks/transactions";
async function main() {
const simnet = await initSimnet();
const accounts = simnet.getAccounts();
const address1 = accounts.get("wallet_1");
if (!address1) throw new Error("invalid wallet name.");
const call = simnet.callPublicFn("counter", "add", [Cl.uint(1)], address1);
console.log(Cl.prettyPrint(call.result)); // (ok u1)
const counter = simnet.getDataVar("counter", "counter");
console.log(Cl.prettyPrint(counter)); // 2
}
main();
By default, the SDK will look for a Clarinet.toml file in the current working directory. It's also possible to provide the path to the manifest like so:
const simnet = await initSimnet("./path/to/Clarinet.toml");
The SDK can be used to write unit tests for Clarinet projects.
You'll need to have Node.js (>= 18) and NPM setup. If you are not sure how to set it up, Volta is a nice tool to get started.
In the terminal, run node --version
to make sure it's available and up to date.
Open your terminal and go to a new or existing Clarinet project:
cd my-project
ls # you should see Clarinet.toml and package.json in the list
Install the dependencies and run the test
npm install
npm test
Visit the clarity starter project to see the testing framework in action.
We recommend to use TypeScript to write the unit tests, but it's also possible to do it with JavaScript. To do so, rename your test files to .test.js
instead of .test.ts
. You can also delete the tsconfig.json
and uninstall typescript with npm uninstall typescript
.
Note: If you want to write your test in JavaScript but still have a certain level of type safety and autocompletion, VSCode can help you with that. You can create a basic jsconfig.json
file:
{
"compilerOptions": {
"checkJs": true,
"strict": true
},
"include": ["node_modules/@hirosystems/clarinet-sdk/vitest-helpers/src", "unit-tests"]
}
FAQs
A SDK to interact with Clarity Smart Contracts in node.js
The npm package @hirosystems/clarinet-sdk receives a total of 880 weekly downloads. As such, @hirosystems/clarinet-sdk popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @hirosystems/clarinet-sdk demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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