[Boards: 3 / a / aco / adv / an / asp / b / bant / biz / c / can / cgl / ck / cm / co / cock / d / diy / e / fa / fap / fit / fitlit / g / gd / gif / h / hc / his / hm / hr / i / ic / int / jp / k / lgbt / lit / m / mlp / mlpol / mo / mtv / mu / n / news / o / out / outsoc / p / po / pol / qa / qst / r / r9k / s / s4s / sci / soc / sp / spa / t / tg / toy / trash / trv / tv / u / v / vg / vint / vip / vp / vr / w / wg / wsg / wsr / x / y ] [Search | Free Show | Home]

how are bitcoins/mined blocks divided up and transfered by satoshis

This is a blue board which means that it's for everybody (Safe For Work content only). If you see any adult content, please report it.

Thread replies: 38
Thread images: 12

File: bjay.jpg (71KB, 308x500px) Image search: [Google]
bjay.jpg
71KB, 308x500px
how are bitcoins/mined blocks divided up and transfered by satoshis ?

i dont get it. how can the ledger keep track of who owns fractions of a block ?

isn't the ledger a chain of whole btc blocks??


i searched all over for an explanation but no one can give me one.

pic unrelated
>>
>>2877818
Who is this boner condoner?
>>
>>2877818
A block is a list of transactions, not a bitcoin

>>2877827
A tranny
>>
damn I thought the underwear said 'hello kikey' for a second
>>
File: bj.jpg (214KB, 736x1103px) Image search: [Google]
bj.jpg
214KB, 736x1103px
>>2877838
but dont miners mine for a block??

how can peices of a bitcoin be stored in a paper wallet for example?
>>
File: buffetunderstand.jpg (32KB, 559x400px) Image search: [Google]
buffetunderstand.jpg
32KB, 559x400px
so no one knows? lol
ok...
>>
>>2877847
To mine a block is to find through bruteforce a solution to a complicated maths problem, which creates a block of transactions and links it to the previous blocks of the blockchain. When you find the solution to the problem you are rewarded with some bitcoins, 12.5 currently.

A wallet is basically a set of 3 numbers: the public key, the private key, and the balance (maybe some other stuff I don't know the specifics). The balance is just a number that has 8 decimals, so there is no issue whatsoever with holding a balance that isn't a whole number
>>
File: bjai.jpg (128KB, 770x1155px) Image search: [Google]
bjai.jpg
128KB, 770x1155px
>>2877883
doesn't explain how fractions are shared on the ledger.

sorry i know im not the brightest bulb but someone has to understand this stuff ...


or do the bitcoins themselves not change owner ship ?like if u download the whole block chian.

does it say who has they coins or where there are.
pizza coins for example... how do those broken up coins get traced? do you understand what im asking ?
i know its weird
>>
Basically you have a fundamental misunderstanding of what a block is, a block is not a bitcoin

The ledger is a chain of blocks of transactions, not of bitcoins

To mine is to create a block of transactions. With the creation of a block comes a reward in bitcoins.

To own bitcoins is not to own blocks, blocks and bitcoins aren't the same thing.
>>
>>2877912
It does explain how fractions are shared, because the amount of BTC in a wallet is determined by the number of BTC associated with it in the ledger. That number doesn't have to be an integer
>>
File: transactions.jpg (48KB, 682x1024px) Image search: [Google]
transactions.jpg
48KB, 682x1024px
>>2877922

but what transactions ?
isn't it a brand new block?
>>
>>2878001
the transactions that are in limbo waiting to be confirmed by mined blocks.
>>
>>2877818
Wow OP! Who is she??
>>
>>2878001
When you issue a transaction it ends up in a pool of unconfirmed transactions, from which miners pick transactions. Again I'm not sure about the specifics but I believe the picked transactions are involved in the calculation that creates a new block. Basically once a new block is created, the picked transactions are already there. There is no such thing as mining an empty block. When a block is created it is already filled with transactions
>>
>>2878029

>she
>>
>>2878029
Newfag
>>
>>2878054
>>2878053
>Falling for this b8
>>
>>2877818

Bitcoin is a distributed ledger. The ledger consists of a series of blocks. Each block requires a certain amount of computational work to be added to the series (the chain). The clients choose the ledger with the series of blocks that contains the most computational work. This way, transaction history is secure because it is (usually- for a network with a large enough chain like Bitcoin) impossible for an attacker to amass enough computing power to create a chain longer than the longest fork to rewrite transactions.

Block rewards are not divided up. A block is mined by a single miner, and as a reward a fixed amount is given to the miner which found the block.

>i dont get it. how can the ledger keep track of who owns fractions of a block ?

Each block contains a list of transactions.
>>
>>2879020
how many trannys go in the block?
what if there aren't enough to fill it up(hypothetically) ?

do u have a picture of a block as an example?
>>
https://bitbonkers.com/ there are numerous other visualizations
>>
>>2879262
da fuq is this supposed 2 be
>>
File: think.png (792KB, 662x708px) Image search: [Google]
think.png
792KB, 662x708px
https://dailyblockchain.github.io/
https://blocks.wizb.it/
http://www.bitlisten.com/
http://bitcoin.interaqt.nl/
>>
>>2879362
so how many trannys does a block take before it is full?
how does it decide when to go to a new block??/
>>
>>2877818
how much btc for this gf
>>
File: baejay.jpg (134KB, 683x1024px) Image search: [Google]
baejay.jpg
134KB, 683x1024px
>>2879362
>http://www.bitlisten.com/
i really just meant to see one on paper or in computer code how it really is desu.....
>>
>>2877912
a block is a list of transactions. here's how fractions work on the ledger:

>A sends 0.221231 BTC to B
>C sends 3 BTC to D
>E sends 5.2313123 BTC to F

thats how you can have fractions, thats all a block is, record of transactions.
>>
File: beejay.jpg (85KB, 600x900px) Image search: [Google]
beejay.jpg
85KB, 600x900px
>>2879384
BUT HOW MANY TRANSACTION GO ON A BLOCK!?!?
does it have to equal up to a certain amount of btc
or a certian number of transactions?!?!
can blocks be different size transactions?
whats the limit???
>>
File: trannies.jpg (90KB, 1011x468px) Image search: [Google]
trannies.jpg
90KB, 1011x468px
just click a tranny to see the details. there are plenty of technical diagrams for devs and other interested parties if that is what you are looking for. https://blockchain.info/charts/n-transactions-per-block?timespan=all here is the amount of transactions per block over time, it's limited by the block size which you can read about here https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Block_size_limit_controversy
>>
>>2877912
>sorry I know I'm not the brightest bulb but
No, you're not. Blocks have literally nothing to do with the size of the transactions they're used to process. For bitcoin, a block is a set of transactions that are processed together within each (approximately) ten minutes.

Each transaction that occurs within that ten minute window is (ideally) processed within that block. That is the only relation between blocks and transactions. A single block could process one transaction, it could process thousands.

The reason the bitcoin ledger tracks btc down to the eighth sig fig is simply because it was designed that way. The original developer decided that .00000001 btc was the smallest transaction size he wanted to make a possibility in his blockchain, and so it was.
>>
>>2879423
your understanding of blockchain is a bit off, you're not dumb, it's just your foundational understanding is wrong and its confusing you.

I suggest just forgetting what you know and start again using a wiki page or something.

>BUT HOW MANY TRANSACTION GO ON A BLOCK!?!?
does it have to equal up to a certain amount of btc
or a certian number of transactions?!?!

Certain number of transactions until it reaches 1mb (the whole segwit thing is about this, the miners want double the limit, 2mb)

>can blocks be different size transactions?

yes, transactions will differ in size but by a very tiny amount, almost neglible, remember that transactions are just "Address1 sent x to Address2, signature"
>>
>>2878052
>there is no such thing as mining an empty block

Yes there is. There's nothing in the code that says each mined block has to have "x" number of transactions, where x is nonzero. The purpose of block rewards is to generate new coins; this happens regardless of if the number of transactions processed by the block, to incentive mining even if the network is not being heavily utilised.
>>
File: 1497728434687.jpg (59KB, 900x600px) Image search: [Google]
1497728434687.jpg
59KB, 900x600px
>>2879451
>>2879453

so if i buy a buttcoin... what am i actually buying?


a space on the block?

a bunch of transactions ?
>>
>>2879500
bro. stop what you're doing. don't buy any cryptocurrency without a basic understanding at least. Read. Read at least a short simplified article on how this works. Its not complicated. Blockchain is actually a very simple and ingenious idea.

Just google 'What is bitcoin?' and you're bound to get a nice informative article that explains all the questions you already asked on this thread.

>Your question

You're buying an actual bitcoin that gets saved to your wallet (your balance anyway). The proof that you bought the coin is in the blockchain, a previous block confirms you received that bitcoin (or a fraction of it).
>>
File: boyleejoy.jpg (62KB, 580x870px) Image search: [Google]
boyleejoy.jpg
62KB, 580x870px
>>2879485

>The purpose of block rewards is to generate new >coins

where do the coins go?
to the miners.

how could satoshi convince so many people to use the coins at first to make them even worth anything. ive never seen a commercial for bitcoin or anything? it seems fishy!
sorry
>>
>>2879539
yes, to the miners. 50 coins for every block at first, gets halved every 210,000 blocks. we're now at 12.5 btc per block.

>how could satoshi convince so many people to use the coins at first to make them even worth anything. ive never seen a commercial for bitcoin or anything?

... no one had to convince anyone. Satoshi provided the means and the tech for a payment method without relying on trust (i.e. your bank).
He created the client and the mining reward. After that, it was all people, people chose to spend it, price drove up as demand drove up, price went down as demand went down. Economics 101 really.
>>
>>2879539
this is just silly at this point but for the sake of anyone actually learning something from this thread: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_bitcoin
>The value of the first bitcoin transactions were negotiated by individuals on the bitcointalk forums with one notable transaction of 10,000 BTC used to indirectly purchase two pizzas delivered by Papa John's.[12]
>Jan 2009 – Mar 2010 No exchanges or market, users were mainly cryptography fans who were sending bitcoins for hobby purposes representing low or no value. In March 2010, user "SmokeTooMuch" auctioned 10,000 BTC for $50 (cumulatively), but no buyer was found.[137][138]
>>
File: BitcoinPizzaDay.png (431KB, 1600x765px) Image search: [Google]
BitcoinPizzaDay.png
431KB, 1600x765px
>>
>>2879539
>>2879577
to whichever miner actually solves the problem. Mining is pretty much a race of luck (with more computing power you "speed up your luck").

So if you had 2000 people mining to find the next block, only the computer which found the block will get the reward. That's why mining pools were created, people 'pooled' their resources together to find blocks, if the mining pool finds the block, the pool divides the reward equally among everyone on the pool based on how much computing power they provided.
Thread posts: 38
Thread images: 12


[Boards: 3 / a / aco / adv / an / asp / b / bant / biz / c / can / cgl / ck / cm / co / cock / d / diy / e / fa / fap / fit / fitlit / g / gd / gif / h / hc / his / hm / hr / i / ic / int / jp / k / lgbt / lit / m / mlp / mlpol / mo / mtv / mu / n / news / o / out / outsoc / p / po / pol / qa / qst / r / r9k / s / s4s / sci / soc / sp / spa / t / tg / toy / trash / trv / tv / u / v / vg / vint / vip / vp / vr / w / wg / wsg / wsr / x / y] [Search | Top | Home]

I'm aware that Imgur.com will stop allowing adult images since 15th of May. I'm taking actions to backup as much data as possible.
Read more on this topic here - https://archived.moe/talk/thread/1694/


If you need a post removed click on it's [Report] button and follow the instruction.
DMCA Content Takedown via dmca.com
All images are hosted on imgur.com.
If you like this website please support us by donating with Bitcoins at 16mKtbZiwW52BLkibtCr8jUg2KVUMTxVQ5
All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective parties.
Images uploaded are the responsibility of the Poster. Comments are owned by the Poster.
This is a 4chan archive - all of the content originated from that site.
This means that RandomArchive shows their content, archived.
If you need information for a Poster - contact them.