= Utilities [.readme-notice] NOTE: This document is better viewed at https://docs.openzeppelin.com/contracts/api/utils Miscellaneous contracts and libraries containing utility functions you can use to improve security, work with new data types, or safely use low-level primitives. * {Math}, {SignedMath}: Implementation of various arithmetic functions. * {SafeCast}: Checked downcasting functions to avoid silent truncation. * {ECDSA}, {MessageHashUtils}: Libraries for interacting with ECDSA signatures. * {SignatureChecker}: A library helper to support regular ECDSA from EOAs as well as ERC-1271 signatures for smart contracts. * {MerkleProof}: Functions for verifying https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merkle_tree[Merkle Tree] proofs. * {EIP712}: Contract with functions to allow processing signed typed structure data according to https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-712[EIP-712]. * {ReentrancyGuard}: A modifier that can prevent reentrancy during certain functions. * {Pausable}: A common emergency response mechanism that can pause functionality while a remediation is pending. * {Nonces}: Utility for tracking and verifying address nonces that only increment. * {ERC165, ERC165Checker}: Utilities for inspecting interfaces supported by contracts. * {BitMaps}: A simple library to manage boolean value mapped to a numerical index in an efficient way. * {EnumerableMap}: A type like Solidity's https://solidity.readthedocs.io/en/latest/types.html#mapping-types[`mapping`], but with key-value _enumeration_: this will let you know how many entries a mapping has, and iterate over them (which is not possible with `mapping`). * {EnumerableSet}: Like {EnumerableMap}, but for https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Set_(abstract_data_type)[sets]. Can be used to store privileged accounts, issued IDs, etc. * {DoubleEndedQueue}: An implementation of a https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double-ended_queue[double ended queue] whose values can be removed added or remove from both sides. Useful for FIFO and LIFO structures. * {Checkpoints}: A data structure to store values mapped to an strictly increasing key. Can be used for storing and accessing values over time. * {Create2}: Wrapper around the https://blog.openzeppelin.com/getting-the-most-out-of-create2/[`CREATE2` EVM opcode] for safe use without having to deal with low-level assembly. * {Address}: Collection of functions for overloading Solidity's https://docs.soliditylang.org/en/latest/types.html#address[`address`] type. * {Arrays}: Collection of functions that operate on https://docs.soliditylang.org/en/latest/types.html#arrays[`arrays`]. * {Base64}: On-chain base64 and base64URL encoding according to https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc4648[RFC-4648]. * {Strings}: Common operations for strings formatting. * {ShortString}: Library to encode (and decode) short strings into (or from) a single bytes32 slot for optimizing costs. Short strings are limited to 31 characters. * {StorageSlot}: Methods for accessing specific storage slots formatted as common primitive types. * {Multicall}: Abstract contract with an utility to allow batching together multiple calls in a single transaction. Useful for allowing EOAs to perform multiple operations at once. * {Context}: An utility for abstracting the sender and calldata in the current execution context. * {Panic}: A library to revert with https://docs.soliditylang.org/en/v0.8.20/control-structures.html#panic-via-assert-and-error-via-require[Solidity panic codes]. [NOTE] ==== Because Solidity does not support generic types, {EnumerableMap} and {EnumerableSet} are specialized to a limited number of key-value types. ==== == Math {{Math}} {{SignedMath}} {{SafeCast}} == Cryptography {{ECDSA}} {{MessageHashUtils}} {{SignatureChecker}} {{MerkleProof}} {{EIP712}} == Security {{ReentrancyGuard}} {{Pausable}} {{Nonces}} == Introspection This set of interfaces and contracts deal with https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_introspection[type introspection] of contracts, that is, examining which functions can be called on them. This is usually referred to as a contract's _interface_. Ethereum contracts have no native concept of an interface, so applications must usually simply trust they are not making an incorrect call. For trusted setups this is a non-issue, but often unknown and untrusted third-party addresses need to be interacted with. There may even not be any direct calls to them! (e.g. ERC-20 tokens may be sent to a contract that lacks a way to transfer them out of it, locking them forever). In these cases, a contract _declaring_ its interface can be very helpful in preventing errors. {{IERC165}} {{ERC165}} {{ERC165Checker}} == Data Structures {{BitMaps}} {{EnumerableMap}} {{EnumerableSet}} {{DoubleEndedQueue}} {{Checkpoints}} == Libraries {{Create2}} {{Address}} {{Arrays}} {{Base64}} {{Strings}} {{ShortStrings}} {{StorageSlot}} {{Multicall}} {{Context}} {{Panic}}