Files
rippled/include/xrpl/protocol
Ed Hennis 629f3f50d7 Merge remote-tracking branch 'XRPLF/ximinez/develop-nolending' into ximinez/lending-XLS-66-2
* XRPLF/ximinez/develop-nolending:
  refactor: Rename `ripple` namespace to `xrpl` (5982)
  refactor: Move JobQueue and related classes into xrpl.core module (6121)
  refactor: Rename `rippled` binary to `xrpld` (5983)
  refactor: rename info() to header() (6138)
  refactor: rename `LedgerInfo` to `LedgerHeader` (6136)
  refactor: clean up `RPCHelpers` (5684)
  chore: Fix docs readme and cmake (6122)
  chore: Clean up .gitignore and .gitattributes (6001)
  chore: Use updated secp256k1 recipe (6118)
2025-12-11 16:45:47 -05:00
..

protocol

Classes and functions for handling data and values associated with the XRP Ledger protocol.

Serialized Objects

Objects transmitted over the network must be serialized into a canonical format. The prefix "ST" refers to classes that deal with the serialized format.

The term "Tx" or "tx" is an abbreviation for "Transaction", a commonly occurring object type.

Optional Fields

Our serialized fields have some "type magic" to make optional fields easier to read:

  • The operation x[sfFoo] means "return the value of 'Foo' if it exists, or the default value if it doesn't."
  • The operation x[~sfFoo] means "return the value of 'Foo' if it exists, or nothing if it doesn't." This usage of the tilde/bitwise NOT operator is not standard outside of the rippled codebase.
    • As a consequence of this, x[~sfFoo] = y[~sfFoo] assigns the value of Foo from y to x, including omitting Foo from x if it doesn't exist in y.

Typically, for things that are guaranteed to exist, you use x[sfFoo] and avoid having to deal with a container that may or may not hold a value. For things not guaranteed to exist, you use x[~sfFoo] because you want such a container. It avoids having to look something up twice, once just to see if it exists and a second time to get/set its value. (Real example)

The source of this "type magic" is in SField.h.