sCrypt
sCrypt
is a Typescript framework to write smart contracts on Bitcoin compatible blockchains.
Installation
Use this command to install sCrypt
in to your machine:
npm install -g scrypt-cli
Create new sCrypt project
simply use the command below to create a new project:
npx scrypt-cli project demo
then change the directory to project folder:
cd demo
and run:
npm install
to install all the dependency needed.
That's all, you're ready to go!
Usage
Write a Contract
A contract can be written as a class that extends the SmartContract
base, a simple example could be like this:
import { SmartContract, method, prop, assert } from "scrypt-ts";
class Demo extends SmartContract {
@prop()
x: bigint;
constructor(x: bigint) {
super(x);
this.x = x;
}
@method()
public unlock(x: bigint) {
assert(this.add(this.x, 1n) === x);
}
@method()
add(x0: bigint, x1:bigint) : bigint {
return x0 + x1;
}
}
Property Decorator: @prop()
Use this decorator on class properties to mark them as contract properties, which means the values would be stored on chain.
This decorator can take a boolean parameter, which indicates whether it can be updated later. If it's true
, the property is so called a stateful
property and its value stored on chain can be updated between contract calls; otherwise, its value can not be changed when the contract deploy, by default its set to false
.
Method Decorator: @method()
Use this decorator on class methods to mark them as contract methods. The logic implemented in these methods would be stored and be executed on chain.
The class methods decorated by @method()
have some special requirements / restrains that should be followed:
-
Within these methods, only functions provided as built-ins from scrypt-ts
or methods also decorated by @method()
can be called; Similarly, only the properties decorated by @prop()
can be use.
-
With public
modifier, a method is marked as an entry method that could be called outside the contract class. The main purpose of these methods is to validate / verify / check assertions for its input parameters according to its @prop()
decorated properties. The return value must be void
.
-
Without a public
modifier, a method is kind of an inner function usually be called within the contract class. It can return any valid types.
Types
The types can be used in @prop()
and @method()
are restricted to these kinds:
- Basic types:
boolean
/ ByteString
/ bigint
;
Note: the type number
is not allowed in @prop()
because it may cause precision issues when representing a floating point number. It can only be used in a few cases like when using FixedArray
or Loop
.
- User types can be defined using
type
or interface
, made of basic types. For example,
type ST = {
a: bigint;
b: boolean;
}
interface ST1 {
x: ST;
y: ByteString;
}
- Array types must be declared using
FixedArray
, whose length must be known at compile time, like:
let aaa: FixedArray<bigint, 3> = [1n, 3n, 3n];
let abb: FixedArray<FixedArray<bigint, 2>, 3> = [[1n, 3n], [1n, 3n], [1n, 3n]];
- Other
SmartContract
subclasses are provided as libraries.
Statements
There are also some other restraints / rules on the statemets that could be used within the @method
s besides the previously mentioned.
for
statement
Because of the underlaying limitation of loop
implemetion on Bitcoin script, one can only use a compile time const number as the loop iterations.
So currently if you want to build a loop inside @method
s, there is only one restricted version of for
statement that could be used. It's looks like:
for(let $i = 0; $i < $constNum; $i++) {
...
}
Note that the initial value 0
and the <
operator and the post unary operator ++
are all unchangeable.
A number literal like:
for(let i = 0; i < 5; i++ ) ...
Or a const
variable name like:
const N = 3;
for(let i = 0; i < N; i++ ) ...
Or a readonly
property name like:
class X {
static readonly N = 3;
}
for(let i = 0; i < X.N; i++ ) ...
console.log
statement
As described before, all Javascript/Typescript built-in functions/global variables are not allowed in @method
s, with only a few exceptions.
One exceptional statement is console.log
, which can be used for debugging purpose.
@method
add(x0: bigint, x1:bigint) : bigint {
console.log(x0);
return x0 + x1;
}
Compile a Contract
Just run npx scrypt-cli@latest compile
, the contract will be compiled if there is no any issue and output the contract json file in the artifact
folder inside the project.
Test a Contract
You could write tests using tools like mocha
, for example:
describe('Test SmartContract `Demo`', () => {
let demo: Demo
before(async () => {
Demo.loadArtifact()
demo = new Demo(3n)
await demo.connect(getDefaultSigner())
})
it('should pass `unlock` with correct answer', async () => {
await demo.deploy(1)
const callContract = async () => demo.methods.unlock(4n)
return expect(callContract()).not.rejected
})
})
Deploy and Call a Contract
With sCrypt deploying and calling Smart Contracts is very simple and easy as the code below:
async function main() {
await Demo.loadArtifact()
const signer = new TestWallet(privateKey, new DefaultProvider({
network: bsv.Networks.testnet
}))
const amount = 1
const instance = new Demo(3n)
await instance.connect(signer)
const deployTx = await instance.deploy(amount)
console.log('Demo contract was successfully deployed!')
console.log(`Deployment TXID: ${deployTx.id}`)
const {tx : callTx} = await instance.methods.unlock(4n)
console.log(`Contract called: ${callTx.id}`)
}
main()
Documentation
The full version of sCrypt
documentation is available here.