From 214179a097f5e77ba080f8afb5860f2fa7b6492d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: clenser Date: Wed, 18 Oct 2023 00:59:06 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Edited ch12_mining.adoc with Atlas code editor --- ch12_mining.adoc | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/ch12_mining.adoc b/ch12_mining.adoc index 400c95c7..5d6cc380 100644 --- a/ch12_mining.adoc +++ b/ch12_mining.adoc @@ -1697,7 +1697,7 @@ valid block. ==== Hard Forks: Software, Network, Mining, and Chain -For software +For ((("software forks", id="software-fork")))((("network forks", id="network-fork")))((("mining forks", id="mining-fork")))((("chain forks", id="chain-fork")))software developers, the term "fork" has another meaning, adding confusion to the term "hard fork." In open source software, a fork occurs when a group of developers choose to follow a different software roadmap and start a @@ -1754,7 +1754,7 @@ New miners may mine on top of the new block, while old miners will mine a separate chain based on the old rules. The partitioned network will make it so that the miners operating on separate consensus rules won't likely receive each other's blocks, as -they are connected to two separate ((("consensus rules", "hard forks", startref="consensus-hard-fork")))((("forks", "hard forks", startref="forks-hard")))((("hard forks", startref="hard-forks")))networks. +they are connected to two separate ((("consensus rules", "hard forks", startref="consensus-hard-fork")))((("forks", "hard forks", startref="forks-hard")))((("hard forks", startref="hard-forks")))((("software forks", startref="software-fork")))((("network forks", startref="network-fork")))((("mining forks", startref="mining-fork")))((("chain forks", startref="chain-fork")))networks. ==== Diverging Miners and Difficulty