This library provides SvelteJS stores for a Nimiq Blockchain Client.
Client initialization is already handled for you (mainnet, pico client). You simply import the stores that you need.
- Install this library from NPM:
yarn add --dev nimiq-svelte-stores
- Add the Nimiq script before the bundle in your
public/index.html
:<script defer src="https://cdn.nimiq-testnet.com/v1.5.2/web.js"></script>
- Import Nimiq stores into your components and start the client, see next sections.
To start the Nimiq Client, call the exported start
function:
import { start } from 'nimiq-svelte-stores`
start()
Advanced: Learn how to configure the Nimiq Client.
import {
ready,
consensus,
established,
headHash,
head,
height,
networkStatistics,
peerCount,
accounts,
accountsRefreshing,
newTransaction,
transactions,
transactionsRefreshing,
} from 'nimiq-svelte-stores'
Store | Type | Initial value |
---|---|---|
ready | Boolean | false |
consensus | String | 'loading' |
established | Boolean | false |
headHash | Nimiq.Hash | null |
head | Nimiq.Block | null |
height | Number | 0 |
networkStatistics | Nimiq.Client.NetworkStatistics | Object |
peerCount | Number | 0 |
accounts | Array<{address: Nimiq.Address, ...}> | [] |
accountsRefreshing | Boolean | false |
newTransaction | Nimiq.Client.TransactionDetails | null |
transactions | Array<Nimiq.Client.TransactionDetails> | [] |
transactionsRefreshing | Boolean | false |
The accounts
and transactions
stores expose methods to write to them and trigger actions.
You can add one or more accounts to the accounts
store by passing the following types to the accounts.add()
method:
Nimiq.Address
string
(userfriendly, hex or base64 address representation)Object<{address: Nimiq.Address | string}>
- Array of these types
If you add objects, they can include whatever properties you like, as long as they have an address
property
which can be interpreted as a Nimiq address. All other properties on the object are preserved and added to the store.
You can use this for example to store an account label
or other meta data in the accounts
store.
The
accounts
store automatically populates and updates accounts'balance
andtype
fields from the blockchain, while consensus is established (as well as other relevant fields for vesting contracts and HTLCs).
Accounts may be removed from the accounts
store with the accounts.remove()
method.
The method takes the same arguments as the add
method above.
The accounts.refresh()
method can be used to manually trigger a blockchain sync of some or all stored accounts
.
When passed any of the arguments accepted by the add
method, only those accounts are refreshed.
If no argument is passed, all stored accounts are refreshed.
You can add single or an array of known Nimiq.Client.TransactionDetails
to the transactions
store with
the transactions.add()
method.
These transaction details are then used when fetching the transaction history for an account, and prevent
a great amount of data from being downloaded again.
When subscribing to the
transactions
store, the transaction history for all stored and newly added accounts is automatically fetched while consensus is established.
The transactions.refresh()
method can be used to manually trigger fetching the transaction history of some
or all stored accounts
. When passed any of the arguments accepted by the accounts.add
method, only the histories
of those accounts are refreshed. If no argument is passed, the history of all stored accounts is refreshed.
The transactions.setSort()
method allows you to overwrite the library's transaction-sorting algorithm.
(By default, transactions are sorted 'newest first'.)
Pass your custom sort function to the setSort()
method.
Your sort function receives two arguments, both Nimiq.Client.TransactionDetails
, and is required to return a number:
< 0
if the first argument should be sorted first, > 0
if the second argument should be sorted first, 0
if both arguments should be sorted equally.
// Sort transactions by their hash value, ascending
function customSort(a, b) {
const aValue = parseInt(a.transactionHash.toHex().substring(0, 10), 16)
const bValue = parseInt(b.transactionHash.toHex().substring(0, 10), 16)
return a - b
}
transactions.setSort(customSort)
This library exposes a Nimiq Client as the client
export.
For configuration options, see Config.
The client
export is undefined
until:
- the
ready
store turnedtrue
or - the
start()
function resolves
There are two ways to make sure the client
is defined when you use it:
- Only enable
client
-triggering elements when theready
store turnedtrue
:
<script>
import { ready, client } from 'nimiq-svelte-stores'
function sendTransaction() {
const tx = ...
client.sendTransaction(tx)
}
</script>
<button disabled={!$ready} on:click={sendTransaction}>Send Transaction</button>
- Await the exported
start()
function:
import { start, client } from 'nimiq-svelte-stores'
async function sendTransaction() {
const tx = ...;
await start() // or: const client = await start()
client.sendTransaction(tx)
}
The Nimiq Client API is documented here: https://doc.esdoc.org/github.com/nimiq/core-js/class/src/main/generic/api/Client.js~Client.html
Tutorials for sending transactions are here: https://nimiq.github.io/tutorials/basics-3-transactions
The Nimiq Client that is created internally in this library can be configured during first start-up.
The start()
method therefore takes a callback as its first argument.
This callback receives a Nimiq.Client.ConfigurationBuilder
instance as an argument, which can be manipulated inside the callback.
Note: The client is only created once, so the config callback is only effective in the first call to the start()
function.
start((config) => {
// Create a volatile consensus (not storing peer information across page reloads)
config.volatile(true)
// Require a local mempool (creates a light consensus)
client.feature(Nimiq.Client.Feature.MEMPOOL)
})