Is it possible to to send out more ether than account has while compensating for it by another transaction in...
Is it possible to have the following scenario?
- Account A has 20 ether, account B has 20 ether
- In transaction 1. Account A sends 25 ether to account B
- In transaction 2. Account B sends 10 ether to account A
- Both transactions are submitted almost at the same time so they will be a part of the same block
After the block is mined the net effect is account A sends 15 ether to account B. So there is enough ether in both accounts to satisfy the account balances.
But does Ethereum infrastructure allows for such operations?
transactions mining balances pending-transactions
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Is it possible to have the following scenario?
- Account A has 20 ether, account B has 20 ether
- In transaction 1. Account A sends 25 ether to account B
- In transaction 2. Account B sends 10 ether to account A
- Both transactions are submitted almost at the same time so they will be a part of the same block
After the block is mined the net effect is account A sends 15 ether to account B. So there is enough ether in both accounts to satisfy the account balances.
But does Ethereum infrastructure allows for such operations?
transactions mining balances pending-transactions
New contributor
add a comment |
Is it possible to have the following scenario?
- Account A has 20 ether, account B has 20 ether
- In transaction 1. Account A sends 25 ether to account B
- In transaction 2. Account B sends 10 ether to account A
- Both transactions are submitted almost at the same time so they will be a part of the same block
After the block is mined the net effect is account A sends 15 ether to account B. So there is enough ether in both accounts to satisfy the account balances.
But does Ethereum infrastructure allows for such operations?
transactions mining balances pending-transactions
New contributor
Is it possible to have the following scenario?
- Account A has 20 ether, account B has 20 ether
- In transaction 1. Account A sends 25 ether to account B
- In transaction 2. Account B sends 10 ether to account A
- Both transactions are submitted almost at the same time so they will be a part of the same block
After the block is mined the net effect is account A sends 15 ether to account B. So there is enough ether in both accounts to satisfy the account balances.
But does Ethereum infrastructure allows for such operations?
transactions mining balances pending-transactions
transactions mining balances pending-transactions
New contributor
New contributor
edited 4 hours ago
shane
1,7024730
1,7024730
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asked 6 hours ago
Vlad
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1184
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These are both valid transactions, provided transaction 2 gets mined before transaction 1.
When a miner finds a block, they include the transactions in an order they choose. If they happen to choose transaction 2 to occur before transaction 1, then transaction 1 will be successful. If they do it in the opposite order, transaction 1 will not be successful.
Many clients that you may use will not allow transaction 1 to go through, because they are reading the state of the blockchain and see that you do not have proper balance, thus they will block the transaction from happening. You can avoid this by manually submitting a transaction to the network.
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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These are both valid transactions, provided transaction 2 gets mined before transaction 1.
When a miner finds a block, they include the transactions in an order they choose. If they happen to choose transaction 2 to occur before transaction 1, then transaction 1 will be successful. If they do it in the opposite order, transaction 1 will not be successful.
Many clients that you may use will not allow transaction 1 to go through, because they are reading the state of the blockchain and see that you do not have proper balance, thus they will block the transaction from happening. You can avoid this by manually submitting a transaction to the network.
add a comment |
These are both valid transactions, provided transaction 2 gets mined before transaction 1.
When a miner finds a block, they include the transactions in an order they choose. If they happen to choose transaction 2 to occur before transaction 1, then transaction 1 will be successful. If they do it in the opposite order, transaction 1 will not be successful.
Many clients that you may use will not allow transaction 1 to go through, because they are reading the state of the blockchain and see that you do not have proper balance, thus they will block the transaction from happening. You can avoid this by manually submitting a transaction to the network.
add a comment |
These are both valid transactions, provided transaction 2 gets mined before transaction 1.
When a miner finds a block, they include the transactions in an order they choose. If they happen to choose transaction 2 to occur before transaction 1, then transaction 1 will be successful. If they do it in the opposite order, transaction 1 will not be successful.
Many clients that you may use will not allow transaction 1 to go through, because they are reading the state of the blockchain and see that you do not have proper balance, thus they will block the transaction from happening. You can avoid this by manually submitting a transaction to the network.
These are both valid transactions, provided transaction 2 gets mined before transaction 1.
When a miner finds a block, they include the transactions in an order they choose. If they happen to choose transaction 2 to occur before transaction 1, then transaction 1 will be successful. If they do it in the opposite order, transaction 1 will not be successful.
Many clients that you may use will not allow transaction 1 to go through, because they are reading the state of the blockchain and see that you do not have proper balance, thus they will block the transaction from happening. You can avoid this by manually submitting a transaction to the network.
answered 4 hours ago
shane
1,7024730
1,7024730
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Vlad is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Vlad is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Vlad is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Vlad is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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