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	Update 9_3_Using_CSV_in_Scripts.md
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				| @ -57,12 +57,10 @@ Issue the transaction, but it can't legally be mined until enough blocks or enou | ||||
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| Except pretty much no one does this. The new [BIP 68](https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0068.mediawiki) definitions for `nSequence` were incorporated into Bitcoin Core at the same time as [BIP 112](https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0112.mediawiki) which describes the CSV opcode, which works with `nSequence`, just like the CLTV opcode works with `nTimeLock`. Just like CLTV, CSV offers increased capabilities. So almost all usage of relative timelocks has been with the CSV opcode, not with the raw `nSequence` value on its own. | ||||
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| <center> | ||||
| |                  | Absolute Timelock | Relative Timelock | | ||||
| |------------------|-------------------|-------------------| | ||||
| |:------------------:|-------------------|-------------------| | ||||
| | **Lock Transaction** | nTimeLock         | nSequence         | | ||||
| | **Lock Output**      | OP_CHECKLOCKTIMEVERIFY| OP_CHECKSEQUENCEVERIFY | | ||||
| </center> | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| ## Understand the CSV Opcode | ||||
| 
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|  | ||||
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