MARKET Protocol has been created to provide a secure, flexible, open source foundation for decentralized trading on the Ethereum blockchain. We provide the pieces necessary to create a decentralized exchange, including the requisite clearing and collateral pool infrastructure, enabling third parties to build applications for trading.
MARKET.js
Take a look at our docs for a little more explanation.
Join our Discord Community to interact with members of our dev staff and other contributors.
MARKET.js is a library for interacting with MARKET Protocol Smart Contracts.
Functionality
COMING SOON!
- Orders
- generating and signing
- filling and cancelling
- verifying signature
- calculating remaining Qtys
- Collateral
- checking a users unallocated collateral balances
- checking a users allocated collateral
- calculation of needed collateral
- wrapper for ERC20 token functionality.
- Positions
- querying users open positions (qty and price)
- PnL calculations
- Events
- Fills
- Collateral Deposit / Withdraw
- Contract Settlement
- Cancelled / Expired orders
- Contract Registry
- MKT Token Access to contracts
- more coming soon!
Contributing
Want to hack on MARKET Protocol? Awesome!
MARKET Protocol is an Open Source project and we welcome contributions of all sorts. There are many ways to help, from reporting issues, contributing code, and helping us improve our community.
Ready to jump in? Check docs.marketprotocol.io/#contributing.
Questions?
Join our Discord Community to get in touch with our dev staff and other contributors.
Usage
$ git clone https://github.com/MARKETProtocol/MARKET.js$ YOURFOLDERNAME$ cd YOURFOLDERNAME$ npm install
Features
- RollupJS for multiple optimized bundles following the standard convention and Tree-shaking
- Tests, coverage and interactive watch mode using Jest
- Prettier and TSLint for code formatting and consistency
- Docs automatic generation and deployment to
gh-pages
, using TypeDoc - Automatic types
(*.d.ts)
file generation - Travis integration and Coveralls report
- (Optional) Automatic releases and changelog, using Semantic release, Commitizen, Conventional changelog and Husky (for the git hooks)
Importing library
You can import the generated bundle to use the whole library generated by this starter:
Additionally, you can import the transpiled modules from dist/lib
in case you have a modular library:
NPM scripts
npm run test
: Run test suitenpm run start
: Runnpm run build
in watch modenpm run test:watch
: Run test suite in interactive watch modenpm run test:prod
: Run linting and generate coveragenpm run build
: Generate bundles and typings, create docsnpm run lint
: Lints codenpm run commit
: Commit using conventional commit style (husky will tell you to use it if you haven't 😉)
Excluding peerDependencies
On library development, one might want to set some peer dependencies, and thus remove those from the final bundle. You can see in Rollup docs how to do that.
Good news: the setup is here for you, you must only include the dependency name in external
property within rollup.config.js
. For example, if you want to exclude lodash
, just write there external: ['lodash']
.
Automatic releases
Prerequisites: you need to create/login accounts and add your project to:
Prerequisite for Windows: Semantic-release uses node-gyp so you will need to install Microsoft's windows-build-tools using this command:
npm install --global --production windows-build-tools
Setup steps
Follow the console instructions to install semantic release and run it (answer NO to "Do you want a .travis.yml
file with semantic-release setup?").
Note: make sure you've setup repository.url
in your package.json
file
npm install -g semantic-release-clisemantic-release-cli setup# IMPORTANT!! Answer NO to "Do you want a `.travis.yml` file with semantic-release setup?" question. It is already prepared for you :P
From now on, you'll need to use npm run commit
, which is a convenient way to create conventional commits.
Automatic releases are possible thanks to semantic release, which publishes your code automatically on github and npm, plus generates automatically a changelog. This setup is highly influenced by Kent C. Dodds course on egghead.io
Git Hooks
There is already set a precommit
hook for formatting your code with Prettier 💅
By default, there are two disabled git hooks. They're set up when you run the npm run semantic-release-prepare
script. They make sure:
- You follow a conventional commit message
- Your build is not going to fail in Travis (or your CI server), since it's runned locally before
git push
This makes more sense in combination with automatic releases
FAQ
Array.prototype.from
, Promise
, Map
... is undefined?
TypeScript or Babel only provides down-emits on syntactical features (class
, let
, async/await
...), but not on functional features (Array.prototype.find
, Set
, Promise
...), . For that, you need Polyfills, such as core-js
or babel-polyfill
(which extends core-js
).
For a library, core-js
plays very nicely, since you can import just the polyfills you need:
...
What if I don't want git-hooks, automatic releases or semantic-release?
Then you may want to:
- Remove
commitmsg
,postinstall
scripts frompackage.json
. That will not use those git hooks to make sure you make a conventional commit - Remove
npm run semantic-release
from.travis.yml
What if I don't want to use coveralls or report my coverage?
Remove npm run report-coverage
from .travis.yml
Resources
- Write a library using TypeScript library starter by @alexjoverm
- 📺 Create a TypeScript Library using typescript-library-starter by @alexjoverm
- Introducing TypeScript Library Starter Lite by @tonysneed
Credits
Thanks to @alexjoverm for a great TypeScript library starter!