Kickstart your dapp frontend development with create-eth-app
Last time we looked at the big picture of Solidity(opens in a new tab) and already mentioned the create-eth-app(opens in a new tab). Now you will find out how to use it, what features are integrated and additional ideas on how to expand on it. Started by Paul Razvan Berg, the founder of Sablier(opens in a new tab), this app will kickstart your frontend development and comes with several optional integrations to choose from.
Installation
The installation requires Yarn 0.25 or higher (npm install yarn --global
). It is as simple as running:
yarn create eth-app my-eth-appcd my-eth-appyarn react-app:start
It is using create-react-app(opens in a new tab) under the hood. To see your app, open http://localhost:3000/
. When you’re ready to deploy to production, create a minified bundle with yarn build. One easy way to host this would be Netlify(opens in a new tab). You can create a GitHub repo, add it to Netlify, setup the build command and you are finished! Your app will be hosted and usable for everyone. And all of it free of charge.
Features
React & create-react-app
First of all the heart of the app: React and all the additional features coming with create-react-app. Only using this is a great option if you do not want to integrate Ethereum. React(opens in a new tab) itself makes building interactive UI's really easy. It may not be as beginner-friendly as Vue(opens in a new tab), but it is still mostly used, has more features and most importantly thousands of additional libraries to choose from. The create-react-app makes it really easy to start with it as well and includes:
- React, JSX, ES6, TypeScript, Flow syntax support.
- Language extras beyond ES6 like the object spread operator.
- Autoprefixed CSS, so you don’t need -webkit- or other prefixes.
- A fast interactive unit test runner with built-in support for coverage reporting.
- A live development server that warns about common mistakes.
- A build script to bundle JS, CSS, and images for production, with hashes and sourcemaps.
The create-eth-app in particular is making use of the new hooks effects(opens in a new tab). A method to write powerful, yet very small so-called functional components. See below section about Apollo for how they are used in create-eth-app.
Yarn Workspaces
Yarn Workspaces(opens in a new tab) allow you to have multiple packages, but being able to manage them all from the root folder and installing dependencies for all at once using yarn install
. This especially makes sense for smaller additional packages like smart contracts addresses/ABI management (the information about where you deployed which smart contracts and how to communicate with them) or the graph integration, both part of create-eth-app
.
ethers.js
While Web3(opens in a new tab) is still mostly used, ethers.js(opens in a new tab) has been getting a lot more traction as an alternative in the last year and is the one integrated into create-eth-app. You can work with this one, change it to Web3 or consider upgrading to ethers.js v5(opens in a new tab) which is almost out of beta.
The Graph
GraphQL(opens in a new tab) is an alternative way for handling data compared to a Restful API(opens in a new tab). They have several advantages over Restful Apis, especially for decentralized blockchain data. If you are interested in the reasoning behind this, have a look at GraphQL Will Power the Decentralized Web(opens in a new tab).
Usually you would fetch data from your smart contract directly. Want to read the time of the latest trade? Just call MyContract.methods.latestTradeTime().call()
which fetches the data from an Ethereum node into your dapp. But what if you need hundreds of different data points? That would result in hundreds of data fetches to the node, each time requiring an RTT(opens in a new tab) making your dapp slow and inefficient. One workaround might be a fetcher call function inside your contract that returns multiple data at once. This is not always ideal though.
And then you might be interested in historical data as well. You want to know not only the last trade time, but the times for all trades that you ever did yourself. Use the create-eth-app subgraph package, read the documentation(opens in a new tab) and adapt it to your own contracts. If you are looking for popular smart contracts, there may even already be a subgraph. Check out the subgraph explorer(opens in a new tab).
Once you have a subgraph, it allows you to write one simple query in your dapp that retrieves all the important blockchain data including historical ones that you need, only one fetch required.
Apollo
Thanks to the Apollo Boost(opens in a new tab) integration you can easily integrate the graph in your React dapp. Especially when using React hooks and Apollo(opens in a new tab), fetching data is as simple as writing a single GraphQl query in your component:
1const { loading, error, data } = useQuery(myGraphQlQuery)23React.useEffect(() => {4 if (!loading && !error && data) {5 console.log({ data })6 }7}, [loading, error, data])Kopiraj
Templates
On top you can choose from several different templates. So far you can use an Aave, Compound, UniSwap or sablier integration. They all add important service smart contract addresses along with pre-made subgraph integrations. Just add the template to the creation command like yarn create eth-app my-eth-app --with-template aave
.
Aave
Aave(opens in a new tab) is a decentralized money lending market. Depositors provide liquidity to the market to earn a passive income, while borrowers are able to borrow using collaterals. One unique feature of Aave are those flash loans(opens in a new tab) which allow you to borrow money without any collateral, as long as you return the loan within one transaction. This can be useful for example for giving you extra cash on arbitrage trading.
Traded tokens that earn you interests are called aTokens.
When you choose to integrate Aave with create-eth-app, you will get a subgraph integration(opens in a new tab). Aave uses The Graph and already provides you with several ready-to-use subgraphs on Ropsten(opens in a new tab) and Mainnet(opens in a new tab) in raw(opens in a new tab) or formatted(opens in a new tab) form.
Compound
Compound(opens in a new tab) is similar to Aave. The integration already includes the new Compound v2 Subgraph(opens in a new tab). The interests earning tokens here are surprisingly called cTokens.
Uniswap
Uniswap(opens in a new tab) is a decentralized exchange (DEX). Liquidity providers can earn fees by providing the required tokens or ether for both sides of a trade. It is widely used and therefore has one of the highest liquidities for a very wide range of tokens. You can easily integrate it in your dapp to, for example, allow users to swap their ETH for DAI.
Unfortunately, at the time of this writing the integration is only for Uniswap v1 and not the just released v2(opens in a new tab).
Sablier
Sablier(opens in a new tab) allows users streaming money payments. Instead of a single payday, you actually get your money constantly without further administration after the initial setup. The integration includes its own subgraph(opens in a new tab).
What's next?
If you have questions about create-eth-app, go to the Sablier community server(opens in a new tab), where you can get in touch with the authors of create-eth-app. As some first next steps you might want to integrate a UI framework like Material UI(opens in a new tab), write GraphQL queries for the data that you actually need and setup the deployment.
Posljednje uređivanje: @pettinarip(opens in a new tab), 4. decembar 2023.