1
0
mirror of https://github.com/bitcoinbook/bitcoinbook synced 2024-11-26 18:08:31 +00:00

Made changes to ch04.asciidoc

This commit is contained in:
drusselloctal@gmail.com 2014-10-30 11:58:01 -07:00
parent 07e4be9306
commit 5881ffbb04

View File

@ -768,7 +768,7 @@ The first level "purpose" is always set to +44'+. The second level "coin_type" s
The third level of the tree is "account," which allows users to subdivide their wallets into separate logical subaccounts, for accounting or organizational purposes. For example, an HD wallet might contain two bitcoin "accounts": m/44'/0'/0' and m/44'/0'/1'. Each account is the root of its own subtree.
On the fourth level, "change," an HD wallet has two subtrees, one for creating receiving addresses and one for creating change addresses. Note that whereas the previous levels used hardened derivation, this level uses normal derivation. This is to allow this level of the tree to export extended public keys for use in a nonsecured environment. Usable addresses are derived by the HD wallet as children of the fourth level, making the fifth level of the tree the "address_index." For example, the third receiving address for bitcoin payments in the primary account would be M/44'/0'/0'/0/2. Here are a few more examples:
On the fourth level, "change," an HD wallet has two subtrees, one for creating receiving addresses and one for creating change addresses. Note that whereas the previous levels used hardened derivation, this level uses normal derivation. This is to allow this level of the tree to export extended public keys for use in a nonsecured environment. Usable addresses are derived by the HD wallet as children of the fourth level, making the fifth level of the tree the "address_index." For example, the third receiving address for bitcoin payments in the primary account would be M/44'/0'/0'/0/2. Table 4-9 shows a few more examples.
.BIP0044 HD wallet structure examples
|=======