Bitcoin Asked by nmat on January 16, 2021
I am aware that Satoshi Nakamoto is the author of the paper that originated Bitcoin and the creator of the original bitcoin client. However, I often hear the term Satoshi as if it was a monetary unit.
What is a Satoshi?
A Satoshi is the smallest fraction of a Bitcoin that can currently be sent: 0.00000001 BTC, that is, a hundredth of a millionth BTC. In the future, however, the protocol may be updated to allow further subdivisions, should they be needed.
Further examples of units
Correct answer by Michael McGowan on January 16, 2021
If you need formula
108 Satoshis == 1 BTC
or in Python
def btc2satoshi(btc: float) -> int:
return int(btc * 10**8)
BTC = 1.0
print(btc2satoshi(BTC))
Answered by Anatoli Babenia on January 16, 2021
A Satoshi is 0.00000001 BTC and currently the smallest transaction unit.
If a Satoshi was equivalent to one penny, a microBTC would be equivalent to one dollar, and one BTC would be equivalent to 1,000,000 dollars.
With one BTC on the order of $1,000 USD, a Satoshi is equivalent to .001 penny
Answered by capecoralhobo on January 16, 2021
1 mBTC = 0.001 BTC
1 mBTC = 100,000 Satoshis
1 uBTC = 0.000001 BTC
1 μBTC = 100 Satoshis
1 Satoshi = 0.00000001 BTC
100 Satoshis = 0.000001 BTC
1,000 Satoshis = 0.00001 BTC
10,000 Satoshis = 0.0001 BTC
1 BTC = 100,000,000 Satoshis
1 BTC = 1,000,000 μBTC
1 BTC = 1000 mBTC
Answered by Aka Gambit on January 16, 2021
A Satoshi is a one hundred millionth of a Bitcoin.
Bitcoins are delimited to eight decimal places so even if Bitcoins are worth $1,000,000 each, you can still do penny transactions.
Answered by cdnbcguy on January 16, 2021
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