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I am going to try and answer to know if I truly understood.

  • You send Bitcoin to another wallet
  • Your request will be added on a block (let's call Block X)
  • Inside that block are transactions in a Linked List structure
  • The full node will give your wallet the Block X's Merkle Root & the right/left hashed transaction & its Merkle Root (MR = h(h(hash|hash)|h(yours|yours)))
  • Your wallet upon receiving Block X's relevant hashed transaction iswill then be used to generate a Markle Root to be compared against Block X'sthe Merkle Root that came from Block X

My answer was based on this answer source:

https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/a/38420

I am going to try and answer to know if I truly understood.

  • You send Bitcoin to another wallet
  • Your request will be added on a block (let's call Block X)
  • Inside that block are transactions in a Linked List structure
  • The full node will give your wallet the Block X's Merkle Root & the right/left hashed transaction
  • Your wallet upon receiving Block X's relevant hashed transaction is then used to generate a Markle Root to be compared against Block X's Merkle Root

My answer was based on this answer source:

https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/a/38420

I am going to try and answer to know if I truly understood.

  • You send Bitcoin to another wallet
  • Your request will be added on a block (let's call Block X)
  • Inside that block are transactions in a Linked List structure
  • The full node will give your wallet the the right/left hashed transaction & its Merkle Root (MR = h(h(hash|hash)|h(yours|yours)))
  • Your wallet upon receiving Block X's relevant hashed transaction will then be used to generate a Markle Root to be compared against the Merkle Root that came from Block X

My answer was based on this answer source:

https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/a/38420

Source Link

I am going to try and answer to know if I truly understood.

  • You send Bitcoin to another wallet
  • Your request will be added on a block (let's call Block X)
  • Inside that block are transactions in a Linked List structure
  • The full node will give your wallet the Block X's Merkle Root & the right/left hashed transaction
  • Your wallet upon receiving Block X's relevant hashed transaction is then used to generate a Markle Root to be compared against Block X's Merkle Root

My answer was based on this answer source:

https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/a/38420