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In order to actually use the accumulation trick, we need "auxiliary" advice wires that are brought in from outside. These can engage in the argument itself, though the only example I can think where that is useful is with public inputs. Somehow, the proof structure exposes these auxiliary evaluations so that the verifier can check them if needed, which is the case with the accumulation.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
In order to actually use the accumulation trick, we need "auxiliary" advice wires that are brought in from outside. These can engage in the argument itself, though the only example I can think where that is useful is with public inputs. Somehow, the proof structure exposes these auxiliary evaluations so that the verifier can check them if needed, which is the case with the accumulation.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: