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https://github.com/bitcoinbook/bitcoinbook
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Merge pull request #2 from ishotjr/develop
Fix typos in ch0(1-3).asciidoc
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a536b7f903
@ -132,7 +132,7 @@ Alice is now ready to start using her new bitcoin web-wallet.
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[[getting_first_bitcoin]]
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[[getting_first_bitcoin]]
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==== Getting your first bitcoins
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==== Getting your first bitcoins
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It is not possible to buy bitcoins at a bank, or foreign exchange kioks, at this time. It is not possible to use a credit card to buy bitcoins, either. At the time this book is being written, in 2013, it is still quite difficult to acquire bitcoins in most countries. There are a number of specialized currency exchanges where you can buy and sell bitcoin in exchange for a local currency. These operate as web-based currency markets and include:
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It is not possible to buy bitcoins at a bank, or foreign exchange kiosks, at this time. It is not possible to use a credit card to buy bitcoins, either. At the time this book is being written, in 2014, it is still quite difficult to acquire bitcoins in most countries. There are a number of specialized currency exchanges where you can buy and sell bitcoin in exchange for a local currency. These operate as web-based currency markets and include:
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* Bitstamp (bitstamp.net), a European currency market that supports several currencies including euros (EUR) and US dollars (USD) via wire transfer
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* Bitstamp (bitstamp.net), a European currency market that supports several currencies including euros (EUR) and US dollars (USD) via wire transfer
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* Coinbase (coinbase.com), a US-based currency market, based in California, that supports US dollar exchange to and from bitcoin. Coinbase can connect to US checking accounts via the ACH system
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* Coinbase (coinbase.com), a US-based currency market, based in California, that supports US dollar exchange to and from bitcoin. Coinbase can connect to US checking accounts via the ACH system
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@ -151,7 +151,7 @@ Alice was introduced to bitcoin by a friend and so she has an easy way of gettin
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==== Sending and receiving bitcoins
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==== Sending and receiving bitcoins
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Alice has created her bitcoin web-wallet and she is now ready to receive funds. Her web-wallet application generated a bitcoin address and the corresponding key (an elliptic curve private key, describe in more detail in <<private keys>>). At this point, her bitcoin address is not known to the bitcoin network or "registered" with any part of the bitcoin system. Her bitcoin address is simply a number that corresponds to a key that she can use to control access to the funds. There is no account or association between that address and an account. Until the moment this address is referenced as the recipient of value in a transaction posted on the bitcoin ledger (the blockchain), it is simply part of the vast number of possible addresses that are "valid" in bitcoin. Once it has been associated with a transaction, it becomes part of the known addresses in the network and anyone can check its balance on the public ledger.
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Alice has created her bitcoin web-wallet and she is now ready to receive funds. Her web-wallet application generated a bitcoin address and the corresponding key (an elliptic curve private key, described in more detail in <<private keys>>). At this point, her bitcoin address is not known to the bitcoin network or "registered" with any part of the bitcoin system. Her bitcoin address is simply a number that corresponds to a key that she can use to control access to the funds. There is no account or association between that address and an account. Until the moment this address is referenced as the recipient of value in a transaction posted on the bitcoin ledger (the blockchain), it is simply part of the vast number of possible addresses that are "valid" in bitcoin. Once it has been associated with a transaction, it becomes part of the known addresses in the network and anyone can check its balance on the public ledger.
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Alice meets her friend Joe who introduced her to bitcoin at a local restaurant so they can exchange some US dollars and put some bitcoins into her account. She has brought a print out of her address and the QR code as shown on the home page of her web-wallet. There is nothing sensitive, from a security perspective, about the bitcoin address, it can be posted anywhere without risking the security of her account and it can be changed by creating a new address at any time. Alice wants to convert just $10 US dollars into bitcoin, so as not to risk too much money on this new technology. She gives Joe a $10 bill and the printout of her address so that Joe can send her the equivalent amount of bitcoin.
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Alice meets her friend Joe who introduced her to bitcoin at a local restaurant so they can exchange some US dollars and put some bitcoins into her account. She has brought a print out of her address and the QR code as shown on the home page of her web-wallet. There is nothing sensitive, from a security perspective, about the bitcoin address, it can be posted anywhere without risking the security of her account and it can be changed by creating a new address at any time. Alice wants to convert just $10 US dollars into bitcoin, so as not to risk too much money on this new technology. She gives Joe a $10 bill and the printout of her address so that Joe can send her the equivalent amount of bitcoin.
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@ -165,7 +165,7 @@ First, Joe has to figure out the exchange rate so that he can give the correct a
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.ZeroBlock - A bitcoin market-rate application for Android and iOS
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.ZeroBlock - A bitcoin market-rate application for Android and iOS
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image::images/zeroblock.png["zeroblock screenshot"]
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image::images/zeroblock.png["zeroblock screenshot"]
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Using one of the applications or websites above, Joe determines the price of bitcoin to be approximately $100 US dollars per bitcoin. At that rate, he should give Alice 0.10 bitcoin, also known as 100 milli-bits, in return for the $10 US dollars she gave him.
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Using one of the applications or websites above, Joe determines the price of bitcoin to be approximately $100 US dollars per bitcoin. At that rate, he should give Alice 0.10 bitcoin, also known as 100 milliBits, in return for the $10 US dollars she gave him.
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Once Joe has established a fair exchange price, he opens his mobile wallet application and selects to "send" bitcoin. He is presented with a screen requesting two inputs:
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Once Joe has established a fair exchange price, he opens his mobile wallet application and selects to "send" bitcoin. He is presented with a screen requesting two inputs:
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@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ A description for the payement: "Purchase at Bob's Cafe"
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Unlike a QR code that simply contains a destination bitcoin address, a "payment request" is a QR encoded URL that contains a destination address, a payment amount and a generic description such as "Bob's Cafe". This allows a bitcoin wallet application to pre-fill the information to send the payment while showing a human-readable description to the user. See <<payment request URL>>, for more details. You can scan the QR code above with a bitcoin wallet application to see what Alice would see.
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Unlike a QR code that simply contains a destination bitcoin address, a "payment request" is a QR encoded URL that contains a destination address, a payment amount and a generic description such as "Bob's Cafe". This allows a bitcoin wallet application to pre-fill the information to send the payment while showing a human-readable description to the user. See <<payment request URL>>, for more details. You can scan the QR code above with a bitcoin wallet application to see what Alice would see.
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====
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====
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Bob says "That's one-dollar-fifty, or fifteen milibits".
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Bob says "That's one-dollar-fifty, or fifteen milliBits".
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Alice uses her smartphone to scan the barcode on display. Her smartphone shows a payment of +0.0150 BTC+ to +Bob's Cafe+ and she selects +Send+ to authorize the payment. Within a few seconds (about the same time as a credit card authorization), Bob would see the transaction on the register, completing the transaction.
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Alice uses her smartphone to scan the barcode on display. Her smartphone shows a payment of +0.0150 BTC+ to +Bob's Cafe+ and she selects +Send+ to authorize the payment. Within a few seconds (about the same time as a credit card authorization), Bob would see the transaction on the register, completing the transaction.
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@ -150,7 +150,7 @@ $ curl https://blockchain.info/unspent?active=1Cdid9KFAaatwczBwBttQcwXYCpvK8h7FK
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}
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}
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----
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----
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The response above shows that the bitcoin network knows of one unspent output (one that has not been redeemed yet) under the ownership of Alice's address _+1Cdid9KFAaatwczBwBttQcwXYCpvK8h7FK+_. The response includes the reference to the transaction in which this unspent output is contained (the payment from Joe) and it's value in Satoshis, at 10 million, equivalent to 0.10 bitcoin. With this information, Alice's wallet application can construct a transaction to transfer that value to new owner addresses.
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The response above shows that the bitcoin network knows of one unspent output (one that has not been redeemed yet) under the ownership of Alice's address _+1Cdid9KFAaatwczBwBttQcwXYCpvK8h7FK+_. The response includes the reference to the transaction in which this unspent output is contained (the payment from Joe) and its value in Satoshis, at 10 million, equivalent to 0.10 bitcoin. With this information, Alice's wallet application can construct a transaction to transfer that value to new owner addresses.
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[TIP]
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[TIP]
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====
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====
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@ -176,7 +176,7 @@ The resulting transaction can be seen using a blockchain explorer web applicatio
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.Alice's transaction to Bob's Cafe
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.Alice's transaction to Bob's Cafe
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image::images/AliceCoffeeTransaction.png["Alice Coffee Transaction"]
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image::images/AliceCoffeeTransaction.png["Alice Coffee Transaction"]
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Use the following link to see it the transaction on the bitcoin blockchain:
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Use the following link to see the transaction on the bitcoin blockchain:
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[[transaction-alice-url]]
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[[transaction-alice-url]]
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.Link to Alice's transaction on the bitcoin blockchain
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.Link to Alice's transaction on the bitcoin blockchain
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@ -186,7 +186,7 @@ https://blockchain.info/tx/0627052b6f28912f2703066a912ea577f2ce4da4caa5a5fbd8a57
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==== Adding the transaction to the ledger
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==== Adding the transaction to the ledger
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The transaction created by Alice's wallet application is 258 bytes long and contains everything necessary to confirm ownership of the funds and assign new onwers. Now, the transaction must be transmitted to the bitcoin network where it will become part of the distributed ledger, the blockchain. In the next section we will see how a transaction becomes part of a new block and how the block is "mined". Finally, we will see how the new block, once added to the blockchain is increasingly trusted by the network as more blocks are added.
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The transaction created by Alice's wallet application is 258 bytes long and contains everything necessary to confirm ownership of the funds and assign new owners. Now, the transaction must be transmitted to the bitcoin network where it will become part of the distributed ledger, the blockchain. In the next section we will see how a transaction becomes part of a new block and how the block is "mined". Finally, we will see how the new block, once added to the blockchain is increasingly trusted by the network as more blocks are added.
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===== Transmitting the transaction
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===== Transmitting the transaction
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@ -224,7 +224,7 @@ Jing started mining in 2010 using a very fast desktop computer to find a suitabl
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A transaction transmitted across the network is not verified until it becomes part of the global distributed ledger, the blockchain. Every ten minutes, miners generate a new block, which contains all the transactions since the last block. New transactions are constantly flowing into the network from user wallets and other applications. As these are seen by the bitcoin network nodes, they get added to a temporary "pool" of unverified transactions maintained by each node. As miners build a new block, they add unverified transactions from this pool to a new block and then attempt to solve a very hard problem (aka Proof-of-Work) to prove the validity of that new block. The process of mining is explained in detail in <<mining>>
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A transaction transmitted across the network is not verified until it becomes part of the global distributed ledger, the blockchain. Every ten minutes, miners generate a new block, which contains all the transactions since the last block. New transactions are constantly flowing into the network from user wallets and other applications. As these are seen by the bitcoin network nodes, they get added to a temporary "pool" of unverified transactions maintained by each node. As miners build a new block, they add unverified transactions from this pool to a new block and then attempt to solve a very hard problem (aka Proof-of-Work) to prove the validity of that new block. The process of mining is explained in detail in <<mining>>
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Transactions are added to the new block, prioritized by the highest-fee transactions first and a few other criteria. Each miner starts the process of mining a new block of transactions as soon as they receive the previous block from the network, knowing they have lost that previous round of competition. They immediately create a new block, fill it with transactions and the fingerprint of the previous block and start calculating a the Proof-of-Work for the new block. Each miner includes a special transaction in their block, one that pays their own bitcoin address a reward of newly created bitcoins (currently 25 BTC per block). If they find a solution that makes that block valid, they "win" this reward because their successful block is added to the global blockchain and the reward transaction they included becomes spendable. Jing, who participates in a mining pool, has setup his software to create new blocks that assign the reward to a pool address. From there, a share of the reward is distributed to Jing and other miners in proportion to the amount of work they contributed in the last round.
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Transactions are added to the new block, prioritized by the highest-fee transactions first and a few other criteria. Each miner starts the process of mining a new block of transactions as soon as they receive the previous block from the network, knowing they have lost that previous round of competition. They immediately create a new block, fill it with transactions and the fingerprint of the previous block and start calculating a the Proof-of-Work for the new block. Each miner includes a special transaction in their block, one that pays their own bitcoin address a reward of newly created bitcoins (currently 25 BTC per block). If they find a solution that makes that block valid, they "win" this reward because their successful block is added to the global blockchain and the reward transaction they included becomes spendable. Jing, who participates in a mining pool, has set up his software to create new blocks that assign the reward to a pool address. From there, a share of the reward is distributed to Jing and other miners in proportion to the amount of work they contributed in the last round.
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Alice's transaction was picked up by the network and included in the pool of unverified transactions. Since it had sufficient fees, it was included in a new block generated by Jing's mining pool. Approximately 5 minutes after the transaction was first transmitted by Alice's wallet, Jing's ASIC miner found a solution for the block and published it as block #277316, containing 419 other transactions. Jing's ASIC miner published the new block on the bitcoin network, where other miners validated it and started the race to generate the next block.
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Alice's transaction was picked up by the network and included in the pool of unverified transactions. Since it had sufficient fees, it was included in a new block generated by Jing's mining pool. Approximately 5 minutes after the transaction was first transmitted by Alice's wallet, Jing's ASIC miner found a solution for the block and published it as block #277316, containing 419 other transactions. Jing's ASIC miner published the new block on the bitcoin network, where other miners validated it and started the race to generate the next block.
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@ -378,7 +378,7 @@ $ bitcoind getinfo
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}
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}
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----
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The data is returned as a JavaScript Object Notation (JSON), a format which can easily be "consumed" by all programming languages but is also quite human-readable. Among this data we see the version of the bitcoin software client (9000), protocol (70002) and wallet file (60000). We see the current balance contained in the wallet, which is zero. We see the current block height, showing us how many blocks are known to this client, 286216. We also see various statistics about the bitcoin network and the settings related to this client. We will explore these settings in more detail in the rest of this chapter.
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The data is returned as a JavaScript Object Notation (JSON), a format which can easily be "consumed" by all programming languages but is also quite human-readable. Among this data we see the version of the bitcoin software client (90000), protocol (70002) and wallet file (60000). We see the current balance contained in the wallet, which is zero. We see the current block height, showing us how many blocks are known to this client, 286216. We also see various statistics about the bitcoin network and the settings related to this client. We will explore these settings in more detail in the rest of this chapter.
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[TIP]
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[TIP]
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====
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====
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@ -397,7 +397,7 @@ wallet encrypted; Bitcoin server stopping, restart to run with encrypted wallet.
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$
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$
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----
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----
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We can verify the wallet has been encrypted, by running +getinfo+ again. This time you will notice a new entry +unlocked_until+ which is a counter showing how long the wallet decryption password will be stored in memory, keeping the wallet unlocked. At first this will be set to zero, meaning the wallet is locked:
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We can verify the wallet has been encrypted by running +getinfo+ again. This time you will notice a new entry +unlocked_until+ which is a counter showing how long the wallet decryption password will be stored in memory, keeping the wallet unlocked. At first this will be set to zero, meaning the wallet is locked:
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----
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$ bitcoind getinfo
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$ bitcoind getinfo
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@ -479,7 +479,7 @@ $ bitcoind getnewaddress
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1hvzSofGwT8cjb8JU7nBsCSfEVQX5u9CL
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1hvzSofGwT8cjb8JU7nBsCSfEVQX5u9CL
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----
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----
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Now, we can use this address to send a small amount of bitcoin to our bitcoind wallet from an external wallet (assuming you have some bitcoin in an exchange, web wallet or othe bitcoind wallet held elsewhere). For this example, we will send 50 millibits (0.050 bitcoin) to the address returned above.
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Now, we can use this address to send a small amount of bitcoin to our bitcoind wallet from an external wallet (assuming you have some bitcoin in an exchange, web wallet or the bitcoind wallet held elsewhere). For this example, we will send 50 millibits (0.050 bitcoin) to the address returned above.
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We can now query the bitcoind client for the amount received by this address, and specify how many confirmations are required before an amount is counted in that balance. For this example, we will specify zero confirmations. A few seconds after sending the bitcoin from another wallet, we will see it reflected in the wallet. We use +getreceivedbyaddress+ with the address and the number of confirmations set to zero (0):
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We can now query the bitcoind client for the amount received by this address, and specify how many confirmations are required before an amount is counted in that balance. For this example, we will specify zero confirmations. A few seconds after sending the bitcoin from another wallet, we will see it reflected in the wallet. We use +getreceivedbyaddress+ with the address and the number of confirmations set to zero (0):
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@ -488,7 +488,7 @@ $ bitcoind getreceivedbyaddress 1hvzSofGwT8cjb8JU7nBsCSfEVQX5u9CL 0
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0.05000000
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0.05000000
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----
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----
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If we ommit the zero from the end of this command, we will only see the amounts that have at least +minconf+ confirmations, where +minconf+ is the setting for the minimum number of confirmations before a transaction is listed in the balance. The +minconf+ setting is specified in the bitcoind configuration file. Since the transaction sending this bitcoin was only sent in the last few seconds, it has still not confirmed and therefore we will see it list a zero balance:
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If we omit the zero from the end of this command, we will only see the amounts that have at least +minconf+ confirmations, where +minconf+ is the setting for the minimum number of confirmations before a transaction is listed in the balance. The +minconf+ setting is specified in the bitcoind configuration file. Since the transaction sending this bitcoin was only sent in the last few seconds, it has still not confirmed and therefore we will see it list a zero balance:
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$ bitcoind getreceivedbyaddress 1hvzSofGwT8cjb8JU7nBsCSfEVQX5u9CL
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$ bitcoind getreceivedbyaddress 1hvzSofGwT8cjb8JU7nBsCSfEVQX5u9CL
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@ -634,7 +634,7 @@ $ bitcoind decoderawtransaction 0100000001d717...388ac00000000
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}
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}
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----
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----
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The transaction decode shows all the compoenents of this transaction, including the transaction inputs, and outputs. In this case we see that the transaction that credited our new address with 50 milibits used one input and generated two outputs. The input to this transaction was the output from a previously confirmed transaction (shown as the vin txid starting with +d3c7+ above). The two outputs correspond to the 50 milibit credit and an output with change back to the sender.
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The transaction decode shows all the components of this transaction, including the transaction inputs, and outputs. In this case we see that the transaction that credited our new address with 50 milibits used one input and generated two outputs. The input to this transaction was the output from a previously confirmed transaction (shown as the vin txid starting with +d3c7+ above). The two outputs correspond to the 50 milibit credit and an output with change back to the sender.
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We can further explore the blockchain by examining the previous transaction referenced by its txid in this transaction, using the same commands (eg. +gettransaction+). Jumping from transaction to transaction we can follow a chain of transactions back as the coins are transmitted from owner address to owner address.
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We can further explore the blockchain by examining the previous transaction referenced by its txid in this transaction, using the same commands (eg. +gettransaction+). Jumping from transaction to transaction we can follow a chain of transactions back as the coins are transmitted from owner address to owner address.
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@ -1187,10 +1187,10 @@ $ sx genpriv 1 < seed | sx addr
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1G1oTeXitk76c2fvQWny4pryTdH1RTqSPW
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1G1oTeXitk76c2fvQWny4pryTdH1RTqSPW
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----
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----
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With deterministic keys we can generate and re-generate thousands of keys, all derived from a single seed in a deterministic chain. This technique is used in many wallet applications to generate keys that can be backed up and restored with a simple multi-word mnemonic. This is easier than having to backup the wallet with all its randomly generated keys every time a new key is created.
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With deterministic keys we can generate and re-generate thousands of keys, all derived from a single seed in a deterministic chain. This technique is used in many wallet applications to generate keys that can be backed up and restored with a simple multi-word mnemonic. This is easier than having to back up the wallet with all its randomly generated keys every time a new key is created.
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[TIP]
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[TIP]
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====
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The sx toolkit offers many useful commands for encoding and decoding addresses, converting to and from different formats and representations. Use them to explore the various formaat such as base58, base58check, hex etc.
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The sx toolkit offers many useful commands for encoding and decoding addresses, converting to and from different formats and representations. Use them to explore the various format such as base58, base58check, hex etc.
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====
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====
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