From 603863da54677e4709f1274132ef415c85d09395 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Javier Vargas Date: Wed, 24 Jun 2020 13:19:31 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] Update 15_2_Programming_Bitcoind_with_C.md --- 15_2_Programming_Bitcoind_with_C.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/15_2_Programming_Bitcoind_with_C.md b/15_2_Programming_Bitcoind_with_C.md index 2c410a6..8155d2a 100644 --- a/15_2_Programming_Bitcoind_with_C.md +++ b/15_2_Programming_Bitcoind_with_C.md @@ -341,7 +341,7 @@ The entire code, with a _little_ more error-checking appears in the Appendix. ## Summary: Programming Bitcoind with C -Using the techniques outlined in [§12.2](12_2_Accessing_Bitcoind_with_C.md) you can write a much more complex program using C calls. This section offers an example, with the first cut of a program that will send money to an address, without your users worrying about where it's coming from, how much they're paying as a fee, or how they get their change back. Obviously, a real-world program would need much better user-input control and error handling, but by outlining how the RPC code works, this section opens up the programming doorways to allow you to take the next step. +Using the techniques outlined in [§15.1](15_1_Accessing_Bitcoind_with_C.md) you can write a much more complex program using C calls. This section offers an example, with the first cut of a program that will send money to an address, without your users worrying about where it's coming from, how much they're paying as a fee, or how they get their change back. Obviously, a real-world program would need much better user-input control and error handling, but by outlining how the RPC code works, this section opens up the programming doorways to allow you to take the next step. ## Appendix: Sending to an Address