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KtorZ a89694ed75
Use less vertical space for type-constructor hint;
Also, show it actually for UnknownTypeConstructor, and not
  UnknownVariable. There's currently an error that wrongly assign an
  'UnknownVariable' in place where it should be an
  'UnknownTypeConstructor'. Fix coming in the next commit.

Signed-off-by: KtorZ <matthias.benkort@gmail.com>
2025-02-22 17:52:21 +01:00
.github fix: skip confirmation 2025-02-21 13:21:15 -05:00
benchmarks Start working on using a decision tree for when expr. Also fmt fix. Other Stuff 2024-11-01 19:34:45 -04:00
crates Use less vertical space for type-constructor hint; 2025-02-22 17:52:21 +01:00
examples minor test rename in aiken.toml 2025-01-30 18:57:09 +07:00
.editorconfig rename examples/tests/{a,b,c,d,e,f} into examples/acceptance_tests/00{1,2,3,4,5,6} 2022-12-14 09:45:24 +01:00
.gitattributes Tweak .gitattributes to exclude insta snapshots from stats (and provide better diffing). 2024-08-13 17:17:41 +02:00
.gitignore chore: commit an ignore we can all use without accidentally commiting test files/folders 2024-03-12 08:10:33 -04:00
CHANGELOG.md chore: update changelog 2025-02-21 15:28:51 -05:00
CONTRIBUTING.md Mention quirks about gnu/musl linux artifact in the release guidelines. 2024-10-02 12:08:01 +02:00
Cargo.lock chore: reintroduce bench graph borders 2025-02-21 15:28:51 -05:00
Cargo.toml chore: bump pallas to 0.32.0 2025-02-19 19:45:02 -05:00
LICENSE chore: update license 2024-05-01 22:10:47 -04:00
README.md chore: remove stats from readme, it's cute but wastes space 2025-02-12 11:55:18 -05:00
flake.lock fix: nix builds 2025-02-15 10:00:24 -05:00
flake.nix fix: nix builds 2025-02-15 10:00:24 -05:00

README.md

Aiken

A modern smart contract platform for Cardano

Licence Tests Twitter/X

Crates.io NPM


Getting Started

Hello, World!

Wanna get started right-away? Complete the Hello, World! tutorial!

Contributing

Want to contribute? See CONTRIBUTING.md to know how.

Changelog

Be on top of any updates using the CHANGELOG and the Project Tracking.

[!NOTE]

The name comes from Howard Aiken, an American physicist and a pioneer in computing.