The Hxro Dexterity dApp Scaffold repos are meant to house good starting scaffolds for ecosystem developers to get up and running quickly with a front-end client UI that integrates several common features found in dApps with some basic usage examples. Wallet Integration. State management. Components examples. Notifications. Setup recommendations.
git clone https://github.com/Calyptus-Learn/dexterity-hxro
cd dexterity-scaffold
npm install
# or
yarn install
Create a .env and input the corresponding values:
NEXT_PUBLIC_MAINNET_RPC=
NEXT_PUBLIC_DEVNET_RPC=
NEXT_PUBLIC_REFERRER_TRG_DEVNET=
NEXT_PUBLIC_REFERRER_TRG_MAINNET=
NEXT_PUBLIC_REFERRER_BPS=
Next, run the development server:
npm run dev
# or
yarn dev
Open http://localhost:3000 with your browser to see the result.
You can start editing the page by modifying pages/index.tsx
. The page auto-updates as you edit the file.
- Product Information
- Mark-price
- Index-price
- Market Orders
- Slippage handler
- View account info
- Cash balance
- Initial Margin Requirement
- Maintenance Margin Requirement
- Account Health
- Account Open Interest (Open Positions Value)
- Account All-time PnL
- Open Positions
- Size
- Net Side
- Mark-price value
- One-click market close (one or all)
- Avg cost (gonna be a bit hard)
- PnL
- Open Orders
- Size
- Level
- Net side
- At-level value
- One-click cancel all
- Products
- Select which product from the MPG to trade on / get feed from
- Effective-current product leverage
- Open Interest
- Funding rate
- Orderbook
- Component
- Connection to live orderbook
- One-click-order
- Limit/Marker Toggle
- Default amount/size
Each Scaffold will contain at least the following features:
Wallet Integration with Auto Connect / Refresh
State Management
Dexterity Context
Dexterity Available Instances: Manifest, Trader, MPG, etc
Components: One or more components demonstrating state management
Web3 Js: Examples of one or more uses of web3 js including a transaction with a connection provider
Sample navigation and page changing to demonstrate state
Clean Simple Styling
Notifications (optional): Example of using a notification system
A Hxro Dexterity Components Repo will be released in the near future to house a common components library.
The scaffold project structure may vary based on the front-end framework being utilized. Below is an example structure for the Next js Scaffold.
├── public : publicly hosted files
├── src : primary code folders and files
│ ├── components: should house anything considered a reusable UI component
│ ├── contexts`: any context considered reusable and useful to many components that can be passed down through a component tree
│ ├── hooks`: any functions that let you 'hook' into react state or lifecycle features from function components
│ ├── models`: any data structure that may be reused throughout the project
│ ├── pages`: the pages that host metadata and the intended `View` for the page
│ ├── stores`: stores used in state management
│ ├── styles`: contain any global and reusable styles
│ ├── utils`: any other functionality considered reusable code that can be referenced
│ ├── views`: contains the actual views of the project that include the main content and components within
style, package, configuration, and other project files
Anyone is welcome to create an issue to build, discuss or request a new feature or update to the existing code base. Please keep in mind the following when submitting an issue. We consider merging high value features that may be utilized by the majority of scaffold users. If this is not a common feature or fix, consider adding it to the component library or cookbook. Please refer to the project's architecture and style when contributing.
If submitting a feature, please reference the project structure shown above and try to follow the overall architecture and style presented in the existing scaffold.
To choose a task or make your own, do the following:
- Add an issue for the task and assign it to yourself or comment on the issue
- Make a draft PR referencing the issue.
The general flow for making a contribution:
- Fork the repo on GitHub
- Clone the project to your own machine
- Commit changes to your own branch
- Push your work back up to your fork
- Submit a Pull request so that we can review your changes
NOTE: Be sure to merge the latest from "upstream" before making a pull request!
To learn more about Next.js, take a look at the following resources:
- Next.js Documentation - learn about Next.js features and API.
- Learn Next.js - an interactive Next.js tutorial.
You can check out the Next.js GitHub repository - your feedback and contributions are welcome!
The easiest way to deploy your Next.js app is to use the Vercel Platform from the creators of Next.js.
Check out our Next.js deployment documentation for more details.