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Solidity is a statically typed, contract-oriented, high-level language for implementing smart contracts on the Ethereum platform.
Solidity is a statically-typed curly-braces programming language designed for developing smart contracts that run on the Ethereum Virtual Machine. Smart contracts are programs that are executed inside a peer-to-peer network where nobody has special authority over the execution, and thus they allow to implement tokens of value, ownership, voting, and other kinds of logic.
When deploying contracts, you should use the latest released version of Solidity. This is because breaking changes, as well as new features and bug fixes are introduced regularly. We currently use a 0.x version number to indicate this fast pace of change.
Instructions about how to build and install the Solidity compiler can be found in the Solidity documentation.
A "Hello World" program in Solidity is of even less use than in other languages, but still:
pragma solidity >=0.6.0 <0.8.0;
contract HelloWorld {
function helloWorld() external pure returns (string memory) {
return "Hello, World!";
}
}
To get started with Solidity, you can use Remix, which is a browser-based IDE. Here are some example contracts:
The Solidity documentation is hosted at Read the docs.
Solidity is still under development. Contributions are always welcome! Please follow the Developers Guide if you want to help.
You can find our current feature and bug priorities for forthcoming releases in the projects section.
Solidity is licensed under GNU General Public License v3.0.
Some third-party code has its own licensing terms.
Any contributions are welcome!
The security policy may be found here.
This is an extended version of the compiler that is able to perform automated formal verification on Solidity code using annotations and modular program verification. For more information on building, installing and examples, see SOLC-VERIFY-README.md.
A preliminary paper was also presented at VSTTE'19 but the tool had major improvements since then, including precise modeling of reference types and memory locations. Up-to-date information can be found in SOLC-VERIFY-README.md.