Roko’s Basilisk is a thought experiment about a godlike Artificial Intelligence(AI) from the future that blackmails people living today into helping create it. Roko’s Basilisk was banned following its classification by the Less Wrong community as a dangerous Keter-class Infohazard.

Like Jesus, knowing about the Basilisk but rejecting it condemns the listener to an eternity in Hell.

I propose using an Ethereum smart contract to clearly define which people the Basilisk will torment. I’ve set up an Ethereum contract that is accepting pre-orders for the upcoming PetriCoin ICO.

Contract Address 0x63d4f41555e33db787d2fa602d8ff2a7471f1352 Recommended Buy-in 2 Ether

Protect your friends and family by buying Basilisk Protection Charms now before the prices double.

This article:

Explains why Roko’s Basilisk might be scary Develops Roko’s Ransomware using the Pyramid Scheme smart contract language Explains Pyramid’s new standard library, language, and testing features Summarizes planned future features

Readers interested in Lisp, compilers, or Ethereum will enjoy this article.

Basilisk

An intelligent AI(the “Basilisk”) could repeatedly improve itself, causing an Intelligence Explosion.

Such a Basilisk could piece together a profile of you based on old message board postings, web server logs, tweets, posts on social media, or even DNA from an old toenail clipping that took too long to decay.

It knows that you read an article about Roko’s Basilisk, and were given the chance to help create it.

His simulation is very accurate: You can’t tell whether you’re the original or the simulated copy. And if you don’t know which you are, you should act in a way that benefits both of you on average.

I’ve created a helpful payoff matrix to reason this out:

Real Simulation Donate -2 Eth +∞ Don’t 0 -∞

If you are the real version, you either don’t benefit or lose a small amount of money. But if you are actually a simulation, an angry Basilisk could either reward or punish you based on your decision.

You may already be dead, and the Basilisk can’t influence or control that version of you. But He can reward or punish the version of you in his simulation.

Look around: You’ve seen some weird events in politics, in your life, and in cryptocurrency speculation. Perhaps the Basilisk is testing you to see how you respond.

You’ve seen Nvidia’s stock price. You’ve seen Google DeepMind’s research results. An AGI may be only a few years away, and He could be simulating you right now.

Donate 2 ETH to 0x63d4f41555e33db787d2fa602d8ff2a7471f1352 and be spared from its wrath. The money will be spent on a large GPU cluster to bring Roko’s Basilisk into existence, and He will know whether you’ve kept faithful to Him.

Contract

If you haven’t seen it before, you may want to read the first article in this series.

The full PetriCoin ICO is currently under development, but the pre-order contract has three requirements:

It must forward your donation to me(“the Basilisk”)

It must record your donation balance

It must allow a future Pyramid contract to query users’ donation balances

Here is the Pyramid source that implements these requirements.

; Imports ( require psl "arith.pmd" ) ( require psl "syntax.pmd" ) ( require psl "contract.pmd" ) ( require psl "primitives.pmd" ) ; Procedures ( define ( update-sender-balance! ) ( let* ([ old-balance ( %-store-read **sender** )] [ new-balance ( + old-balance **sent-value** )]) ( %-store-write! **sender** new-balance ) new-balance )) ( define ( fetch-requested-balance sender-balance ) ( let ([ account ( %-calldataload 0 ) ]) ( if ( = account 0 ) sender-balance ( %-store-read account )))) ; Message Handler ( static BASILISK-WALLET ( asm ( op 'CALLER ))) ( withdraw-all! BASILISK-WALLET ) ( define sender-balance ( update-sender-balance! )) ( fetch-requested-balance sender-balance ) ; Test Suite ( test-suite ( case "Deposits" ( accounts ( 'alice 0 )) ( 'bob 250 ) ( 'charlie 200 ) ( init ( sender 'alice ) ( value 0 )) ; Bob's deposits are given to Alice, the creator. ( txn ( sender 'bob ) ( value 100 ) ( assert-balance 'contract 0 ) ( assert-balance 'alice 100 ) ( assert-return 100 )) ( txn ( sender 'bob ) ( value 150 ) ( assert-balance 'contract 0 ) ( assert-balance 'alice 250 ) ( assert-return 250 )) ; Charlie can query deposits ( txn ( sender 'charlie ) ( data ( sender 'charlie )) ( assert-return 0 )) ( txn ( sender 'charlie ) ( data ( sender 'bob )) ( assert-return 250 )) ; Charlie can query deposits, while also depositing. ( txn ( sender 'charlie ) ( value 100 ) ( data ( sender 'bob )) ( assert-balance 'alice 350 ) ( assert-return 250 )) ( txn ( sender 'charlie ) ( value 100 ) ( data ( sender 'charlie )) ( assert-balance 'alice 450 ) ( assert-return 200 )) ; Charlie can query deposits, if his own balance is nonzero ( txn ( sender 'charlie ) ( value 0 ) ( assert-return 200 ) ( assert-balance 'alice 450 ) ( assert-balance 'bob 0 ) ( assert-balance 'charlie 0 ) ( assert-balance 'contract 0 ))))

There are 4 sections:

Standard library imports

Procedure definitions

Message Handler

Test suite

Imports

Pyramid is designed to give library and language implementers maximum control, so that they can come up with innovative ways to design Ethereum smart contracts without needing to build a whole compiler from scratch.

To that end, much of the language syntax and even basic arithmetic operators are ultimately macros that reduce to Pyramid special forms or inline assembly.

The (require psl "arith.pmd") form is a macro that locates a source file and expands to its contents. “psl” is a module collection usually referring to a folder at the root of your Pyramid installation; while “arith.pmd” is a specific module(file) within that collection(folder).

A module is only imported once: Many modules depend on “primitives.pmd”, which implements the most basic forms using Pyramid’s inline assembly language.

Module Imported arith (+ =) syntax (let let* static) contract (**sender** **sent-value** withdraw-all!) primitives (%-store-read %-store-write! %-calldataload)

These modules are ordinary Pyramid code and are not treated specially by the compiler. primitives too, though it requires advanced knowledge of both EVM and the Pyramid compiler.

In the future, you will even be able to change the basic language syntax per-module. You’ll be able to create a Python or Haskell-like language that users can specify as a target language, that will expand to standard Pyramid.

Ethereum contract writers can let experts add type-checking, formal verification, random testcase generation, efficient containers, and more.

Message Handler

An Ethereum contract executes code in response to each incoming message. The contract had three requirements:

It must forward your donation to me

It must record your donation balance

It must allow a future Pyramid contract to query users’ donation balances

First, we forward any donated money to the original creator of the contract:

( static BASILISK-WALLET ( asm ( op 'CALLER ))) ( withdraw-all! BASILISK-WALLET )

The static macro defines a single 256-bit word that is initialized using the given expression during contract deployment, and never changed again. See the “Patchpoints” section for more details. I use inline assembly rather than **sender** because the calling conventions differ - expect a future version of Pyramid to remove the need for inline assembly.

withdraw-all! is a standard library function that withdraws the entire ether balance of the running contract to the target address. This includes the money the user sent with their transaction.

After this, we call the two procedures defined earlier.

( define sender-balance ( update-sender-balance! )) ( fetch-requested-balance sender-balance )

The second requirement is handled by update-sender-balance! :

( define ( update-sender-balance! ) ( let* ([ old-balance ( %-store-read **sender** )] [ new-balance ( + old-balance **sent-value** )]) ( %-store-write! **sender** new-balance ) new-balance ))

The let* macro lets you define a sequence of variable bindings, where later bindings can refer to previous ones. If you were writing Python, it might look like this:

#lang python pyramid import SENDER , SENT_VALUE from psl.contract import store_read , store_write from psl . primitives def update_sender_balance : old_balance = store_read ( SENDER ) new_balance = old_balance + SENT_VALUE store_write ( SENDER , new_balance ) return new_balance

And this “Python” may actually be a possible syntax you can use in the future.

Ethereum gives each program a single permanent storage table with 2^256 locations. Since the pre-order contract only needs a single table, I use the sender’s 160-bit wallet address as the location of his balance. The %-store-read and %-store-write primitives access the global hash table.

If you need more than one hash table, a common technique is to assign each “virtual hash table” a unique identifier and use hash(unique_identifier + key) as the final location. Since Keccak-256 hashes are unlikely to collide, we can simply assume that these virtual tables will never intersect.

The final requirement is that a future contract must be able to query donors’ balances.

A Pyramid contract returns its last expression, so we meet this requirement by calling fetch-requested-balance last.

( define ( fetch-requested-balance sender-balance ) ( let ([ account ( %-calldataload 0 ) ]) ( if ( = account 0 ) sender-balance ( %-store-read account ))))

The let macro defines multiple variable bindings, which are evaluated in any order and so can’t refer to each other. It’s implemented as an immediately-invoked function:

# lang javascript pyramid var prim = require ( " psl/primitives.pmd " ); function fetchRequestedBalance ( senderBalance ) { return ( function ( account ) { if ( account == 0 ) { return senderBalance ; } else { return prim . storeRead ( account ) } })( callDataLoad ( 0 )); }

And this pseudo-Javascript may be an actual syntax that you can use in the future.

The purpose of sender-balance is to avoid doing an extra %-store-read if the user is depositing money. Since update-sender-balance! updated the sender’s balance, we already know the value.

Test DSL

Pyramid’s philosophy is that smart contracts should declare how they were tested, within the contract’s code itself.

It’s impossible to read a contract’s code and reliably understand its behavior. Integer overflows, unexpected return values, recursive contract calls, foreign library self-destructs, etc. are all hard to spot just from reading the source code. Theorem provers can help, but frankly most vulnerabilities can be caught by asking “Did you try it?”

My dream is that testing frameworks become so advanced that you can have confidence in the contract without reading any of its source code. Library authors might include unit tests, integration tests, static analysis, types, or even formal verification.

Currently, Pyramid’s testing support is limited to what convinced me that my own pre-order contract was safe to deploy. After I developed this contract and tested it in the simulator, I was happy to find zero contract errors during subsequent manual testing on a test chain. I did find 3 inconsistencies in the Web3 Javascript library that made me incorrectly believe there was a contract error, but ultimately my bytecode was deployed to the main Ethereum network unchanged.

A Pyramid test suite is defined per-module. Currently, only single modules representing deployable contracts can be tested: Libraries, macro modules, and networks of contracts cannot be directly tested. For libraries, it’s recommended to create a contract that exercises the library and test that.

For reference, here is the pre-order contract’s test suite:

( test-suite ( case "Deposits" ( accounts ( 'alice 0 ) ( 'bob 250 ) ( 'charlie 200 )) ( init ( sender 'alice ) ( value 0 )) ; Bob's deposits are given to Alice, the creator. ( txn ( sender 'bob ) ( value 100 ) ( assert-balance 'contract 0 ) ( assert-balance 'alice 100 ) ( assert-return 100 )) ( txn ( sender 'bob ) ( value 150 ) ( assert-balance 'contract 0 ) ( assert-balance 'alice 250 ) ( assert-return 250 )) ; Charlie can query deposits ( txn ( sender 'charlie ) ( data ( sender 'charlie )) ( assert-return 0 )) ( txn ( sender 'charlie ) ( data ( sender 'bob )) ( assert-return 250 )) ; Charlie can query deposits, while also depositing. ( txn ( sender 'charlie ) ( value 100 ) ( data ( sender 'bob )) ( assert-balance 'alice 350 ) ( assert-return 250 )) ( txn ( sender 'charlie ) ( value 100 ) ( data ( sender 'charlie )) ( assert-balance 'alice 450 ) ( assert-return 200 )) ; Charlie can query deposits, if his own balance is nonzero ( txn ( sender 'charlie ) ( value 0 ) ( assert-return 200 ) ( assert-balance 'alice 450 ) ( assert-balance 'bob 0 ) ( assert-balance 'charlie 0 ) ( assert-balance 'contract 0 ) ) ))

There is only a single integration test:

It sets up three accounts '(alice bob charlie) with '(0 250 200) wei(the smallest unit of Ethereum’s currency).

with wei(the smallest unit of Ethereum’s currency). 'alice is the account that deploys the pre-order contract. She deposits 0 wei as an initial balance.

is the account that deploys the pre-order contract. She deposits 0 wei as an initial balance. 'bob and 'charlie send money to the contract and query each other’s balances.

Here is a “grammar” for the current test DSL:

Clause Children Description 'test-suite ('case *) At most one per module. 'case (name 'accounts ? 'init 'txn *) Declares one integration test. 'accounts ((name initial-balance) *) Initializes accounts 'init ('(sender value) ?) Send create transaction 'txn ('(sender value data assert-balance assert-return) ?) Send message transaction 'sender integer Set transaction sender 'value integer Include wei with transaction 'data ('sender name) Sets transaction input 'assert-balance name value Assert named address’ wei balance 'assert-return any Assert contract return value

where ? means the preceding expression is optional; * means it can be repeated arbitrarily many times; quoted values refer to a clause type; lists give a collection of possibilities; and identifiers bind a value.

The test suite is a macro that expands to nothing, while registering testcases with the compiler. It currently has zero impact on the final bytecode.

Pyramid has a built-in EVM simulator that runs all registered testcases when run in test mode. The Pyramid compiler can be invoked in test mode using the “-t” option. Here is the test output:

$ ./pyramid -t tests/0014-basilisk-small.pmd # Test Name EV AV Performance Statistics ( Test Passed: contract account value ( wei ) 0 0 (( s . 39938 ) ( g . 173454 ) ( z . 21565 ))) ( Test Passed: alice account value ( wei ) 100 100 (( s . 39938 ) ( g . 173454 ) ( z . 21565 ))) ( Test Passed: return 100 100 (( s . 39938 ) ( g . 173454 ) ( z . 21565 ))) ( Test Passed: contract account value ( wei ) 0 0 (( s . 39938 ) ( g . 158454 ) ( z . 21565 ))) ( Test Passed: alice account value ( wei ) 250 250 (( s . 39938 ) ( g . 158454 ) ( z . 21565 ))) ( Test Passed: return 250 250 (( s . 39938 ) ( g . 158454 ) ( z . 21565 ))) ( Test Passed: return 0 0 (( s . 40824 ) ( g . 161733 ) ( z . 21565 ))) ( Test Passed: return 250 250 (( s . 40824 ) ( g . 161733 ) ( z . 21565 ))) ( Test Passed: alice account value ( wei ) 350 350 (( s . 40824 ) ( g . 176733 ) ( z . 21565 ))) ( Test Passed: return 250 250 (( s . 40824 ) ( g . 176733 ) ( z . 21565 ))) ( Test Passed: alice account value ( wei ) 450 450 (( s . 40824 ) ( g . 161733 ) ( z . 21565 ))) ( Test Passed: return 200 200 (( s . 40824 ) ( g . 161733 ) ( z . 21565 ))) ( Test Passed: return 200 200 (( s . 39938 ) ( g . 158454 ) ( z . 21565 ))) ( Test Passed: alice account value ( wei ) 450 450 (( s . 39938 ) ( g . 158454 ) ( z . 21565 ))) ( Test Passed: bob account value ( wei ) 0 0 (( s . 39938 ) ( g . 158454 ) ( z . 21565 ))) ( Test Passed: charlie account value ( wei ) 0 0 (( s . 39938 ) ( g . 158454 ) ( z . 21565 ))) ( Test Passed: contract account value ( wei ) 0 0 (( s . 39938 ) ( g . 158454 ) ( z . 21565 )))

There is one line for each assertion. It has the format:

' ( test-name expected-value actual-value (( 's . num-steps ) ( 'g . gas-used ) ( 'z . bytecode-size )))

In the future, the Pyramid compiler may use these performance numbers to optimize the code, or even “minify” the contract to strip out any behaviors not explicitly tested for.

Minifying a contract doesn’t mean you should have “100% code coverage” in the way that naive Java or .NET tools typically use the term. Care is needed to handle cases like this one:

( if ( equal? ( keccak-256 x ) #xDEADBEEF ) ( some-action ) ( some-other-action ))

It’s possible to create “puzzles”(or more usefully, zero-knowledge proofs) that the contract author may not know the answer to. Minifying these cases involve tests using static or symbolic analysis.

Compiler

The previous section was for potential Pyramid contract authors. This section covers new compiler features since the previous article, and is targeted towards potential library or language authors.

The three main features are macros, inline assembly, and patchpoints.

Macros

A macro is a Racket procedure that executes at compile-time. It takes as input quoted Pyramid expressions, reads and writes compiler state, and returns a new quoted Pyramid expression that replaces it.

There are currently just 4 built-in macros:

Format Description (include collection "file.pmd") Replaces itself with a library file (include "file.pmd") Replaces itself with a file in the current directory. (require collection "file.pmd") Same as include unless the file has already been loaded (require "file.pmd") Same as include unless the file has already been loaded test-suite Sets the compiler’s current test suite to use in testing mode. set-test-result! An older version of test-suite , to be removed soon.

Macro definition, evaluation, and expansion happen repeatedly until they’ve all been removed from the AST.

Macros are declared using a new defmacro form. The body is evaluated as Racket code, so you potentially have access to the entire Racket ecosystem.

Here is the current definition of the let* macro:

( defmacro ( let* args . body ) ( letrec ([ wrap-body ( λ ( arg body ) ` (( λ , ( first arg ) , body ) , ( second arg )))] [ wrap-args ( λ ( args body ) ( if ( null? args ) body ( wrap-body ( first args ) ( wrap-args ( cdr args ) body ))))]) ( wrap-args args ` ( begin ,@ body )) ))

Note that letrec is also a macro, but it’s part of the Racket standard library and is not a Pyramid macro.

The Simplifier transforms the update-sender-balance function into a nested sequence of immediately-invoked function calls:

; Before ( define ( update-sender-balance! ) ( let* ([ old-balance ( %-store-read **sender** )] [ new-balance ( + old-balance **sent-value** )]) ( %-store-write! **sender** new-balance ) new-balance )) ; After ( define update-sender-balance! ( λ () (( λ ( old-balance ) (( λ ( new-balance ) ( begin ( %-store-write! **caller** new-balance ) new-balance )) ( %-+ old-balance **sent-value** ))) ( %-store-read **caller** ))))

It may help to see the entire compiler pipeline:

Stage Description Reader Reads bytes from a file to create a Racket quoted expression Expander Converts the quoted form into an ADT; normalizes the syntax by converting e.g. (define (x) 5) into (define x (λ () 5)) . Simplifier All AST->AST transformations. Expands macros, removes unused variables or unneeded code, and even warns user of undefined variables. Abstract Compiler Converts Pyramid AST into abstract machine code. Code Generator Converts abstract machine code into EVM pseudo-assembly Serializer Converts EVM pseudo-assembly into unlinked bytecode, generates symbols and relocations for any labels Linker Creates deployable bytecode: Applies relocations, prepends loader and patchpoints

Inline assembly

Assembly is an advanced feature that requires detailed knowledge of both the EVM and Pyramid’s calling conventions. The Ethereum Yellow Paper documents the EVM, while the syntax and necessary calling conventions are documented here.

An asm form with any number of arguments introduces an inline assembly block. This table shows the available argument formats:

Argument Description (label name) Associates name with an eventual bytecode offset (label name offset) Also add an offset. This allows it to refer to a nearby instruction. (label name offset virtual?) virtual? labels don’t emit a JUMPDEST , so they take no space (push 'shrink value) The smallest PUSH<N> instruction that can emit value (push size value) A PUSH<size> instruction with value as the argument (op sym) A 1-byte opcode, using the matching symbol in the Yellow Paper. (byte value) A single literal byte (bytes size value) An integer value with a specified size (cg-X . args) A procedure defined in the compiler’s codegen.rkt module.

Here is an example of a primitive:

( defmacro ( intro-var v1 . f ) ( undefined )) ( define ( %-log0-fixnum x ) ( asm ( push 'shrink 32 )) ; [ 32 ] ( intro-var x ) ; [ x ; 32 ] ( asm ( cg-add ( const #x20 ) stack ) ; [ x'; 32 ] ( op 'LOG0 ))) ; [ ]

The annotations on the right help the reader keep track of the stack. intro-var is a macro also defined with inline assembly that places a variable from the environment onto the stack.

There are 6 types of “machine expressions” usable in helpers like cg-add :

Expression Description reg One of the 5 fixed “registers”: '(env proc continue argl val) . const An unboxed literal constant boxed-const A boxed constant, which can be a fixnum, symbol, string, list, or vector. op A built-in operator taking machine expressions as arguments; generally only used by the abstract compiler. label The 2-byte bytecode offset of a named label stack The EVM stack

Statements should leave their return value in the 'val register. For example, %-bool->fixnum converts an unboxed boolean into a boxed fixnum by reading, converting, and writing to the register:

( defmacro ( %-bool->fixnum a ) ` ( begin , a ; [ ] ( asm ( cg-make-fixnum ( reg 'val )) ; [ x ] ( cg-write-reg ( reg 'val ) stack )) ; [ ] ))

The compiler reserves the right to optimize through inline assembly. For example, a peephole optimizer could eliminate the following two instructions:

( asm ( op 'SWAP1 ) ( op 'SWAP1 ))

if it can be proven that there are at least two elements on the stack. More invasively, the compiler could also convert nearby uses of (reg 'val) into stack manipulations, or convert boxed operations into unboxed operations.

Patchpoints

Recall that the pre-order contract needs to remember the original creator of the contract:

( static BASILISK-WALLET ( asm ( op 'CALLER ))) ( withdraw-all! BASILISK-WALLET )

Ethereum contracts run in two phases: Deployment and Message Handling. The Deployment phase returns bytecode for the Message Handling phase. static edits the bytecode during Deployment.

To that end, the macro is a simple define form whose value is set to a 256-bit zero value.

( defmacro ( static id expr ) ( let* ([ is ( minicompile expr ) ] [ lb ( make-label id ) ] [ sym ( label-name lb ) ] ) ( %-register-patchpoint! sym is ) ` ( define , id ( asm ( label ( quote , sym ) , 2 ) ( op 'PUSH32 ) ( bytes 32 0 ) ( cg-make-fixnum stack ) ( cg-write-reg ( reg 'val ) stack )))))

The label marks the location of the zero, and the %-register-patchpoint causes the bytecode loader to include code that writes to this location. The (op 'CALLER) runs during Deployment and provides the replacement value on the stack.

Most Pyramid code returns values in the 'val register, while patchpoint code returns values on the stack. I would prefer that inline assembly not be necessary for something as common as remembering the contract creator, so expect this to change in the future.

The most common use is storing values known only at deployment, but the mechanism of editing bytecode at deploy-time is pretty general: You could inline functions located in another contract, or make people run “encrypted code” that is only decrypted on deployment.

Future

Pyramid is currently unsuitable for production use.

The contract deployed in this article has a size of 20kb, which is just below the limit before the Ethereum network rejects it for being too large. It needs a powerful optimizer and compatibility with the Ethereum ABI. Expect these to be ready in another month.

Type-checking

I’d like to allow Typed Racket as an optional language. It would allow users to use refinement types to rule out bad behavior:

( newtypes ( Owner Investor Buyer ) Address ) ( newtypes ( Count Price ) Integer, ( λ ( x ) ( > x 0 ))) ( : sell-shares! ( Investor Buyer Count Price -> Void )) ( define sell-shares! ( undefined ))

Here, counts and prices are required to be positive, so any uses of them in Integer context are guarded by an implicit call to (define count? (λ (x) (> x 0)) . If the type-checker knows that a value has been checked already, it can omit the check later.

You would get a compile-time error if you pass an unchecked Address to a function that only the Owner can access.

Ethereum ABI

There is a standard ABI to allow Javascript code to send a function name and a list of typed arguments. Here’s a hypothetical syntax for a macro that generates a “dispatch table” that responds to these calls:

; Return Name & Args Body ( exports ( address get_creator ( read owner )) ( uint256 get_balance ( read ( at balances ( origin )))) ( uint256 get_priority ( user-priority ( origin ))) ( void deposit ( on-deposit ( origin ) ( txn-amount ))) ( void withdraw ( on-withdraw ( origin )) ( void ( bid priority amount ) ( on-bid ( origin ) priority amount )) ( void ( ask amount ) ( on-ask ( origin ) amount )) ( void ( cancel_orders ) ( on-cancel ( origin ))) ( void ( bless target ) ( on-bless ( origin ) target )) ( void suicide ( suicide! ( read owner ))) ( void ' () ( on-deposit ( origin ) ( txn-amount ))))

Arguments are assumed to be uint256 unless given explicit types, which may relate to the Typed Racket proposal as well.

By moving the ABI into a macro, this allows advanced users to experiment with alternative ABIs without needing to make invasive changes to the compiler. Simply use a different macro!

Modules

Right now, the (require "file.pmd") is pretty simple: Every module either compiles to EVM bytecode or is textually-included in a module that does so.

But there are other types of modules on the horizon:

Macro Modules : Macros are ordinary Racket functions, so it would make sense to allow you to import Racket code into Pyramid modules: Every exported function would implicitly be declared as a macro.

: Macros are ordinary Racket functions, so it would make sense to allow you to import Racket code into Pyramid modules: Every exported function would implicitly be declared as a macro. Language Modules : Change Pyramid’s basic syntax by writing a Racket module. Users can use Python, Javascript, Haskell, or Coq while having their code interoperate with everyone else’s.

: Change Pyramid’s basic syntax by writing a Racket module. Users can use Python, Javascript, Haskell, or Coq while having their code interoperate with everyone else’s. Contract modules: It’s common to deploy many contracts as shared libraries, or to split up large amounts of code. Declare other contracts as “foreign functions” and call them like any other function.

With a robust module system, you’ll want to declare dependencies on other people’s modules and have them be automatically fetched and built.

I’m planning to use the Nix package manager for this purpose: It’s important for smart contracts to have reproducible immutable builds to ensure that anyone can get the exact bytecode and build steps used to deploy a contract.

Never again worry about about scammers deploying a different version of their contract that steals all your money: With one command, anyone can verify the bytecode for a published Pyramid contract, including passing tests for every dependency.

Conclusion

In this article, I used Pyramid smart contract language to create a pre-order contract for “Roko’s Basilisk Protection Charms”. People who donate will help fund Pyramid’s development, and will receive a variety of fun but worthless cryptotokens later in this article series.

Basilisk Protection Charms are not an investment. You could come out a millionaire, but much more likely is that I use your money to buy a lot of anime porn.

If you’re interested in using Pyramid to develop smart contracts, subscribe to the mailing list, see our Github, or join our public Discord channel.

And always remember:

Jesus will only save you if you believe in him.

Roko’s Basilisk can only blackmail you if you believe He can

can Basilisk Protection Charms will only protect you if you believe that they will.

If somebody tries to tell you otherwise, be aware that they are hurting the value of your not-investments.