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Types

CashScript is a statically typed language, which means that the type of each variable needs to be specified. Types can also be implicitly or explicitly cast to other types. For a quick reference of the various casting possibilities, see Type Casting.

Boolean

bool: The possible values are constants true and false.

Operators:

  • ! (logical negation)
  • && (logical conjunction, “and”)
  • || (logical disjunction, “or”)
  • == (equality)
  • != (inequality)
note

The operators || and && don't apply common short-circuiting rules. This means that in the expression f(x) || g(y), g(y) will still be executed even if f(x) evaluates to true.

Integer

int: Signed integer of 64 bit size.

Operators:

  • Comparisons: <=, <, ==, !=, >=, > (all evaluate to bool)
  • Arithmetic operators: +, -, unary -, *, /, % (modulo).

Note the lack of the ** (exponentiation) operator as well as any bitwise operators.

Over- & Underflows

The maximum range for 64-bit integers is -9223372036854775807 to 9223372036854775807, operations exceeding these limits will fail the transaction. So operations like summation, subtraction and multiplication should take into account these boundary cases with over- or underflows.

caution

Contract authors should always consider whether +, - and * operations can cause under- or overflows and how this would impact contract security.

Division by Zero

The script will fail when the right hand side of division or modulo operations is zero.

caution

Contract authors should always consider whether / and % operations have division-by-zero edge cases and how this would impact contract security.

Date Parsing

Dates and times are always represented as integers. To get the UTC timestamp of a date use the built-in parser to avoid any potential errors. This will take a date in the format date("YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss") and convert it to an integer timestamp.

Example

int timestamp = date("2021-02-17T01:30:00");
require(timestamp == 1613554200);

String

string: UTF8-encoded byte sequence.

Operators:

  • + (concatenation)
  • == (equality)
  • != (inequality)

Members:

  • length: Number of characters in the string.
  • split(int): Splits the string at the specified index and returns a tuple with the two resulting strings.
  • reverse(): Reverses the string.
caution

The script will fail if split() is called with an index that is out of bounds.

Bytes

bytes: Byte sequence. Prefixed with 0x to indicate hexadecimal sequence. Can optionally be bound to a byte length by specifying e.g. bytes4, bytes32, bytes64. It is also possible to use byte as an alias for bytes1.

Operators:

  • + (concatenation)
  • == (equality)
  • != (inequality)
  • & (bitwise AND)
  • | (bitwise OR)
  • ^ (bitwise XOR)

Members:

  • length: Number of bytes in the sequence.
  • split(int): Splits the byte sequence at the specified index and returns a tuple with the two resulting byte sequences.
  • reverse(): Reverses the byte sequence.
caution

The script will fail if split() is called with an index that is out of bounds.

Example

bytes mintingCapability = 0x02;
bytes noCapability = 0x;

Bytes types with semantic meaning

Some byte sequences hold specific meanings inside Bitcoin Cash contracts. These have been granted their own types, separate from the regular bytes type.

Public Key

pubkey: Byte sequence representing a public key. Generally 33 bytes long.

Operators:

  • == (equality)
  • != (inequality)

Transaction Signature

sig: Byte sequence representing a transaction signature. Generally 65 bytes long.

Operators:

  • == (equality)
  • != (inequality)

Data Signature

datasig: Byte sequence representing a data signature. Generally 64 bytes long.

Operators:

  • == (equality)
  • != (inequality)

Array

Arrays are not assignable and can only be used with the checkMultisig function using the following syntax:

checkMultisig([sig1, sig2], [pk1, pk2, pk3]);

Tuple

Tuples are the type that is returned when calling the split member function on a string or bytes type. Their first or second element can be accessed through an indexing syntax similar to other languages:

string question = "What is Bitcoin Cash?";
string answer = question.split(15)[0].split(8)[1];

It is also possible to assign both sides of the tuple at once with a destructuring syntax:

string bitcoin, string cash = "BitcoinCash".split(7);
require(bitcoin == cash);

Type Casting

Type casting can be done both explicitly and implicitly as illustrated below. pubkey, sig and datasig can be implicitly cast to bytes, meaning they can be used anywhere where you would normally use a bytes type. Explicit type casting can be done with a broader range of types, but is still limited. The syntax of this explicit type casting is illustrated below. Note that you can also cast to bounded bytes types.

See the following table for information on which types can be cast to other which other types.

TypeImplicitly castable toExplicitly castable to
intbytes, bool
boolint
stringbytes
bytessig, pubkey, int
pubkeybytesbytes
sigbytesbytes
datasigbytesbytes

Example

pubkey pk = pubkey(0x0000);
bytes editedPk = bytes(pk) + 0x1234;
bytes4 integer = bytes4(25);

Int to Byte Casting

When casting integer types to bytes of a certain size, the integer value is padded with zeros, e.g. bytes4(0) == 0x00000000. It is also possible to pad with a variable number of zeros by passing in a size parameter, which indicates the size of the output, e.g. bytes(0, 4 - 2) == 0x0000. The size casting can be a very important feature when keeping local state in an nftCommitment or in the simulated state.

note

VM numbers follow Script Number format (A.K.A. CSCriptNum), to convert VM number to bytes or the reverse, it's recommended to use helper functions for these conversions from libraries like Libauth.

caution

When casting bytes types to integer, you should be sure that the bytes value fits inside a 64-bit signed integer, or the script will fail.