Reference: Updates¶
This page gives reference information on Updates. For the structure around them, see Overview: Template Structure.
Background¶
- An
Updateis ledger update. There are many different kinds of these, and they’re listed below. - They are what can go in a choice body.
Binding Variables¶
boundVariable <- UpdateExpression1
- One of the things you can do in a choice body is bind (assign) an Update expression to a variable. This works for any of the Updates below.
do¶
do
updateExpression1
updateExpression2
docan be used to groupUpdateexpressions. You can only have one update expression in a choice, so any choice beyond the very simple will use adoblock.Anything you can put into a choice body, you can put into a
doblock.By default,
doreturns whatever is returned by the last expression in the block.So if you want to return something else, you’ll need to use
returnexplicitly - see return for an example.
create¶
create NameOfTemplate with exampleParameters
createfunction.Creates a contract on the ledger. When a contract is committed to the ledger, it is given a unique contract identifier of type
ContractId <name of template>.Creating the contract returns that
ContractId.Use
withto specify the template parameters.Requires authorization from the signatories of the contract being created. This is given by being signatories of the contract from which the other contract is created, being the controller, or explicitly creating the contract itself.
If the required authorization is not given, the transaction fails. For more detail on authorization, see Signatory Parties.
exercise¶
exercise IdOfContract NameOfChoiceOnContract with choiceArgument1 = value1
exercisefunction.- Exercises the specified choice on the specified contract.
- Use
withto specify the choice parameters. - Requires authorization from the controller(s) of the choice. If the authorization is not given, the transaction fails.
exerciseByKey¶
exerciseByKey @ContractType contractKey NameOfChoiceOnContract with choiceArgument1 = value1
exerciseByKeyfunction.- Exercises the specified choice on the specified contract.
- Use
withto specify the choice parameters. - Requires authorization from the controller(s) of the choice and from at least one of the maintainers of the key. If the authorization is not given, the transaction fails.
fetch¶
fetchedContract <- fetch IdOfContract
fetchfunction.- Fetches the contract with that ID. Usually used with a bound variable, as in the example above.
- Often used to check the details of a contract before exercising a choice on that contract. Also used when referring to some reference data.
fetch cidfails ifcidis not the contract id of an active contract, and thus causes the entire transaction to abort.- The submitting party must be an observer or signatory on the contract, otherwise
fetchfails, and similarly causes the entire transaction to abort.
fetchByKey¶
fetchedContract <- fetchByKey @ContractType contractKey
fetchByKeyfunction.- The same as
fetch, but fetches the contract with that contract key, instead of the contract ID. - Like
fetch,fetchByKeyneeds to be authorized by at least one stakeholder of the contract. - Fails if no contract can be found.
lookupByKey¶
fetchedContractId <- lookupByKey @ContractType contractKey
lookupByKeyfunction.- Use this to confirm that a contract with the given contract key exists.
- If the submitting party is a stakeholder of a matching contract,
lookupByKeyreturns theContractIdof the contract; otherwise, it returnsNone. Transactions may fail due to contention because the key changes between the lookup and committing the transaction, or becasue the submitter didn’t know about the existence of a matching contract. - All of the maintainers of the key must authorize the lookup (by either being signatories or by submitting the command to lookup).
abort¶
abort errorMessage
abortfunction.- Fails the transaction - nothing in it will be committed to the ledger.
errorMessageis of typeText. Use the error message to provide more context to an external system (e.g., it gets displayed in Daml Studio script results).- You could use
assert Falseas an alternative.
assert¶
assert (condition == True)
assertkeyword.- Fails the transaction if the condition is false. So the choice can only be exercised if the boolean expression evaluates to
True. - Often used to restrict the arguments that can be supplied to a contract choice.
Here’s an example of using assert to prevent a choice being exercised if the Party passed as a parameter is on a blacklist:
choice Transfer : ContractId RestrictedPayout
with newReceiver : Party
controller receiver
do
assert (newReceiver /= blacklisted)
create RestrictedPayout with receiver = newReceiver; giver; blacklisted; qty
getTime¶
currentTime <- getTime
getTimekeyword.- Gets the ledger time. (You will usually want to immediately bind it to a variable in order to be able to access the value.)
- Used to restrict when a choice can be made. For example, with an
assertthat the time is later than a certain time.
Here’s an example of a choice that uses a check on the current time:
choice Complete : ()
controller party
do
-- bind the ledger effective time to the tchoose variable using getTime
tchoose <- getTime
-- assert that tchoose is no earlier than the begin time
assert (begin <= tchoose && tchoose < addRelTime begin period)
return¶
return ()
returnkeyword.- Used to return a value from
doblock that is not of typeUpdate.
Here’s an example where two contracts are created in a choice and both their ids are returned as a tuple:
do
firstContract <- create SomeContractTemplate with arg1; arg2
secondContract <- create SomeContractTemplate with arg1; arg2
return (firstContract, secondContract)
let¶
See the documentation on Let.
Let looks similar to binding variables, but it’s very different! This code example shows how:
do
-- defines a function, createdContract, taking a single argument that when
-- called _will_ create the new contract using argument for issuer and owner
let createContract x = create NameOfContract with issuer = x; owner = x
createContract party1
createContract party2
this¶
this lets you refer to the current contract from within the choice body. This refers to the contract, not the contract ID.
It’s useful, for example, if you want to pass the current contract to a helper function outside the template.