Units: Difference between revisions
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| kiloBitcoin || kBTC || 1,000 || - || Rarely used in context | | kiloBitcoin || kBTC || 1,000 || - || Rarely used in context | ||
|- | |- | ||
| Original Block Reward || - || 50 || block || Until [[Halving day 2012|block 210000]] | | Original Block Reward || - || 50 || block || Until [[Halving day 2012|block 210000]]<ref>{{cite block|209999|year=2012|month=11|day=28|hash=00000000000000f3819164645360294b5dee7f2e846001ac9f41a70b7a9a3de1}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
| Current Block Reward || - || 25 || block || As of [[Halving day 2012|block 210000]] | | Current Block Reward || - || 25 || block || As of [[Halving day 2012|block 210000]]<ref>{{cite block|210000|year=2012|month=11|day=28|hash=000000000000048b95347e83192f69cf0366076336c639f9b7228e9ba171342e}}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
| decaBitcoin || daBTC || 10 || - || Rarely used in context | | decaBitcoin || daBTC || 10 || - || Rarely used in context |
Revision as of 14:37, 6 March 2015
While units in Bitcoin usually follow the Standard Metric Notation system, this page lists the most commonly-used units. These can be expressed in any number of ways, from using some form of the prefix to an abbreviation of both the prefix and adding Bitcoin. Bitcoin as a unit of account is sometimes written without capitalization, but since it is not a genericized term yet and refers to one specific type of crypto-currency, capitalization is left as an exercise for the reader.
Unit | Abbreviation | Decimal (BTC) | Alternate names | Info |
---|---|---|---|---|
Algorithmic Max | - | 20,999,999.9769[1] | - | Current Max Possible: 20999839.77085749[2] |
megaBitcoin | MBTC | 1,000,000 | - | Rarely used in context |
kiloBitcoin | kBTC | 1,000 | - | Rarely used in context |
Original Block Reward | - | 50 | block | Until block 210000[3] |
Current Block Reward | - | 25 | block | As of block 210000[4] |
decaBitcoin | daBTC | 10 | - | Rarely used in context |
Bitcoin | BTC | 1 | coin | Base unit (100 million satoshis) |
deciBitcoin | dBTC | 0.1 | - | Rarely used in context |
centiBitcoin | cBTC | 0.01 | bitcent | Frequently used until the November 2013 bubble |
milliBitcoin | mBTC | 0.001 | millibit, millicoin, millie | Thousandth of a Bitcoin, frequently used subdivision |
microBitcoin | μBTC | 0.000001 | bit | Millionth of a Bitcoin, frequently used subdivision |
Finney[5] | - | 0.0000001 | Finney | 10 millionth, 1e-7 |
satoshi | - | 0.00000001 | none | 100 millionth, 1e-8, smallest possible unit |
See also
References
- ↑ Wolfram Alpha Calculation
- ↑ Current actually possible must take into account duplicate coinbases, destroyed fees, and provably destroyed coin outputs including the unspendable Genesis block. Some of this can be derived from 'bitcoin-cli gettxoutsetinfo' and subtracting that value from the then-current theoretically-possible maximum. As of this writing, it is 160.20604251 of unspendable BTC.
- ↑ Block 209999. Main chain. 2012-11-28. Hash 00000000000000f3819164645360294b5dee7f2e846001ac9f41a70b7a9a3de1. Block explorer
- ↑ Block 210000. Main chain. 2012-11-28. Hash 000000000000048b95347e83192f69cf0366076336c639f9b7228e9ba171342e. Block explorer
- ↑ After Hal Finney, Bitcoin Pioneer