Skip to content

Like the Gospel repo, but multiple members of a council must unanimously confirm verses (voting on the validity) before any text can enter the final book.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

nathan-websculpt/council

Repository files navigation

Note that this code started out in The Gospel Repo (this is where the dev for enforcing a voting system will go, while the Gospel Project will remain a way for a single person to store a book).

From the Gospel Repo 👀

Gospel of John on Optimism

What's next?

Ideally, I believe that this would be better with a council-of-members voting on the validity of a section-of-text BEFORE it is stored.

Please see the following repo to see how a council-of-members can vote on text before it is processed: 'crowd-fund-v4'.

And this repo to see how a (self-governed) council-of-members can have access to donations: 'general-fund'.

Built with Scaffold-ETH 2 👇

🏗 Scaffold-ETH 2

🧪 An open-source, up-to-date toolkit for building decentralized applications (dapps) on the Ethereum blockchain. It's designed to make it easier for developers to create and deploy smart contracts and build user interfaces that interact with those contracts.

⚙️ Built using NextJS, RainbowKit, Hardhat, Wagmi, Viem, and Typescript.

  • Contract Hot Reload: Your frontend auto-adapts to your smart contract as you edit it.
  • 🪝 Custom hooks: Collection of React hooks wrapper around wagmi to simplify interactions with smart contracts with typescript autocompletion.
  • 🧱 Components: Collection of common web3 components to quickly build your frontend.
  • 🔥 Burner Wallet & Local Faucet: Quickly test your application with a burner wallet and local faucet.
  • 🔐 Integration with Wallet Providers: Connect to different wallet providers and interact with the Ethereum network.

Debug Contracts tab

Requirements

Before you begin, you need to install the following tools:

Quickstart

To get started with Scaffold-ETH 2, follow the steps below:

  1. Install dependencies if it was skipped in CLI:
cd my-dapp-example
yarn install
  1. Run a local network in the first terminal:
yarn chain

This command starts a local Ethereum network using Hardhat. The network runs on your local machine and can be used for testing and development. You can customize the network configuration in packages/hardhat/hardhat.config.ts.

  1. On a second terminal, deploy the test contract:
yarn deploy

This command deploys a test smart contract to the local network. The contract is located in packages/hardhat/contracts and can be modified to suit your needs. The yarn deploy command uses the deploy script located in packages/hardhat/deploy to deploy the contract to the network. You can also customize the deploy script.

  1. On a third terminal, start your NextJS app:
yarn start

Visit your app on: http://localhost:3000. You can interact with your smart contract using the Debug Contracts page. You can tweak the app config in packages/nextjs/scaffold.config.ts.

Run smart contract test with yarn hardhat:test

  • Edit your smart contract YourContract.sol in packages/hardhat/contracts
  • Edit your frontend homepage at packages/nextjs/app/page.tsx. For guidance on routing and configuring pages/layouts checkout the Next.js documentation.
  • Edit your deployment scripts in packages/hardhat/deploy

Documentation

Visit our docs to learn how to start building with Scaffold-ETH 2.

To know more about its features, check out our website.

Contributing to Scaffold-ETH 2

We welcome contributions to Scaffold-ETH 2!

Please see CONTRIBUTING.MD for more information and guidelines for contributing to Scaffold-ETH 2.

About

Like the Gospel repo, but multiple members of a council must unanimously confirm verses (voting on the validity) before any text can enter the final book.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages