Show HN: Find any smart contract on Cookbook (cookbook.dev)
Currently it is extremely difficult to find good talent when building on blockchain or if you want to create smart contracts. Cookbook.dev makes web3 projects easier to build and launch. Bringing down the cost of development is crucial to onboard the next 10,000 businesses onto web3.
How does it work?
Step 1. Search for the Smart Contract you are looking for. For example:- Azuki Contract or Create your own token or NFT staking, choose from hundreds of smart contracts
Step 2. Choose the Smart Contract you want. For example:- Choose based on your use case such as Create a DAO, NFT minting website or any use case you desire…
Step 3. Customize it from our user friendly nocode UI and deploy
Optional Step: Upload your own contract to share with others or reach out to us if you don’t find the smart contract you want.
Why use Cookbook.dev?
Reduce development cost Faster time to build Simple and easy to use UI Save $$ on security audits Our no code and low code solution encourages more people to build in Web3
Our ask Our platform is completely free to use, the only thing we ask for is feedback - https://www.cookbook.dev/ We would love to know what can we do to make your life easier or how can we make our platform better, you can share your feedback with us here - https://discord.gg/9TwGrYbQCD
37 comments
[ 3.9 ms ] story [ 164 ms ] threadAny plans to support vyper?
Can someone ELI5? Or, ELI am a software engineer with no web3 knowledge, at least?
Once they're uploaded to the blockchain, they're there permanently. That's really scary, because it's very difficult to write complicated code without bugs. When smart contracts have bugs, you can have massive hacks where literally billions of dollars are stolen.
Because the consequences are so high, people end up paying developers a ludicrous amount of money to write and deploy (i.e. upload to the blockchain) these contracts. A lot of projects also pay auditors thousands to read/review the smart contract code. This is pretty wasteful, because most contracts end up being the exact same thing: I'm making it up, but probably 80% of the code on ethereum is for NFTs.
This site seems to be aggregating all of the most common contracts and audits so people can reuse code that has already been approved.
Smart contracts on blockchain scare me, because I just don’t think humans are capable of writing (or auditing!) perfect code.
What is a real world example where someone with no experience deploying smart contracts would use something like this to deploy a smart contract?
I just don’t see it. If you don’t even know how to deploy something, how could you possibly have any place deploying something, let alone modifying or vetting the source?
Hm, I wonder why that is.
What’s been the most interesting use case you’ve seen so far?