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Solidity, the Smart Contract Programming Language
c603369a51
EIP-141 ethereum/EIPs#141 has preserved 0xfe as an invalid opcode for aborting EVM execution. The EVM assembler supports this via the INVALID opcode. The LLL "panic" expression used to generate a jump to an invalid location in order to abort EVM execution. This change brings "panic" into line with EIP-141 by generating the INVALID opcode instead. |
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cmake | ||
deps@b3db890589 | ||
docs | ||
libdevcore | ||
libevmasm | ||
libjulia/backends/evm | ||
liblll | ||
libsolidity | ||
lllc | ||
scripts | ||
solc | ||
std | ||
test | ||
.editorconfig | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitmodules | ||
.travis.yml | ||
appveyor.yml | ||
Changelog.md | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
LICENSE.txt | ||
README.md |
The Solidity Contract-Oriented Programming Language
Useful links
To get started you can find an introduction to the language in the Solidity documentation. In the documentation, you can find code examples as well as a reference of the syntax and details on how to write smart contracts.
You can start using Solidity in your browser with no need to download or compile anything.
The changelog for this project can be found here.
Solidity is still under development. So please do not hesitate and open an issue in GitHub if you encounter anything strange.
Building
See the Solidity documentation for build instructions.
How to Contribute
Please see our contribution guidelines in the Solidity documentation.
Any contributions are welcome!