Originally published byDev.to
Today I sent a SOL transfer on devnet and inspected the transaction on Solana Explorer.
One thing that really stood out to me was the
--allow-unfunded-recipient flag.
It helped me understand that on Solana, creating a wallet address does not automatically mean an on-chain account exists.
The address exists immediately after generating a keypair, but the actual account only exists once it’s funded.
So in this transaction, I wasn’t just sending SOL; the network was also creating the recipient account on-chain.
Very different from Ethereum’s “just send” model.
🇺🇸
More news from United StatesUnited States
NORTH AMERICA
Related News
Amazon Employees Are 'Tokenmaxxing' Due To Pressure To Use AI Tools
20h ago
UCP Variant Data: The #1 Reason Agent Checkouts Fail
6h ago

Décryptage technique : Comment builder un téléchargeur de vidéos Reddit performant (DASH, HLS & WebAssembly)
16h ago
How Braze’s CTO is rethinking engineering for the agentic area
10h ago
Encryption Protocols for Secure AI Systems: A Practical Guide
20h ago

