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12:00 AM
The reason is that the old user is not the new user.
 
especially when you can just push a few buttons and tell Windows to shut the fuck up or copy the files and then use them
 
@RMartinhoFernandes The old user doesn't exist.
 
@DeadMG so if a user is deleted all their personal documents should suddenly be public?
 
and I most certainly own every bit and byte on my own damn hard drive
 
12:01 AM
@DeadMG Because you killed it!
 
@DeadMG yeah, it annoys me that as admin, you have permission to change the permissions, but not permission to do other stuff
<3 root
 
@MooingDuck What else are you gonna do with them?
 
@DeadMG delete them
 
the point is, it's my hard drive, I own it, and Windows has absolutely no right to tell me otherwise
 
are any of you guys running lion?
and use qt i should ask?
 
12:06 AM
Ok, since no one provided non-silly ideas, I'm starting anyway.
main = undefined!
 
non-silly ideas for what?
 
A roguelike I'm making.
 
what's a roguelike again?
 
Sigh. Kids these days.
21 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
The roguelike is a sub-genre of role-playing video games, characterized by level randomization, permanent death, and turn-based movement. Most roguelikes feature ASCII graphics, with newer ones increasingly offering tile-based graphics. Games are typically dungeon crawls, with many monsters, items, and environmental features. Computer roguelikes usually employ the majority of the keyboard to facilitate interaction with items and the environment. The name of the genre comes from the 1980 game Rogue. Origin The roguelike genre takes its name from Rogue, a role-playing video game based o...
 
oh, that
you are a secret agent who investigates the murder of your estranged lover, and also why she keeps popping back as a hallucination, and you track it down to a strange underground temple full of various supernatural monsters
 
12:10 AM
I think I heard this before...
 
hehehe
 
I only re-used that one element, be quiet
or how about you are a tank commander in a hypothetical future where a chemical attack has depleted the atmospheric oxygen! Now all your gunpowder and fuel doesn't work so you must get old-skool and fight the enemy hand-to-hand. Bonus: You die if your oxygen tanks run out.
 
Hey, silly ideas are good, too.
 
I think @Xeo knows something about game dev.
 
12:14 AM
Are you implying we don't?
:P
 
it's a roguelike
what were you expecting, Shakespeare?
which is lucky, because I hate Shakespeare
 
NetHack has some Shakespeare in it.
 
@CatPlusPlus I think that most of us would enjoy the programming aspects and not so much the story, artwork and finishing touches.
 
Story can be fun to create.
 
I'm more interested in game mechanics. I don't want to make "NetHack with a tank guy in the future".
 
12:16 AM
hey
 
@RMartinhoFernandes nethack with a tank guy in the past?
 
I just described a mechanic where you die if you run out of oxygen
 
@DeadMG No slight intended.
 
so you have to keep harvesting all the dead guy's oxygen tanks
 
12:17 AM
The anime series Bakuman is about 2 people who want to become manga authors. Large portion of the series is about their struggle to invent an interesting story. It's fascinating.
 
if you stop killing bad guys (or looting it sometimes) then you aspyhxiate!
and also if you're running low then various funky things start happening
obviously in a roguelike you can't exactly do interesting visual effects, but you could do like, you start missin attacks and shit
 
I have colours and Unicode at my disposal!
 
paint
sim city
 
As you become stronger the map zooms out so you can take on bigger tasks.
That seems more like an economy game.
 
Xeo
Suddenly, plink!
Just when I was cursing my damn router...
 
12:22 AM
@Xeo Perhaps you can help @RMartinhoFernandes with his roguelike.
 
hmm, it's getting harder and harder to charge my phone. I need a new charging cable
 
@MooingDuck Yeah that makes sense.
:)
Woohoo, I got the yearling badge again.
 
right!
I finally fixed the debug D3D runtime, found and fixed three bugs in my program, and absolutely none of them solved the problem
 
I guess you shouldn't work for a game company then :p
 
I don't :P
 
12:27 AM
@MooingDuck Or battery.
Which is bit more likely.
 
My iPhone 3GS was so full of dust that I wasn't able to connect the headphone jack nor charger anymore.
 
@CatPlusPlus it won't admit that the cable is connected, and the cable is half fallen apart. I think it's the cable.
 
Ah, that kind of difficulty.
 
12:47 AM
OK, I have a problem
I re-jiggered the access to my other hard-drive so that I could access everything
but on a seemingly random subsection of files and folders, the changes won't recursively propagate
I can't manually edit a thousand MP3s so I can listen to them
any suggestions?
 
What's "re-jiggering"?
 
I had to change the owner to myself, then add myself in the permissions list and manually give myself permissions to do whatever I wanted to the file
it's not a long process but I can't do that myself for 1k or more files
 
@DeadMG Do you have any neutrinos handy?
You want to do it fast right?
 
Xeo
@DeadMG, on Windows or Linux?
 
Windows
 
12:52 AM
Select them all > Properties > Change > Ok?
 
nope
 
Xeo
Hm, on Linux it could've been the way you mount the drive, as permission changes don't work on mounted drives. But on Windows, no idea
 
right
I changed the Local Security Policy to say "Act as part of the operating system: Me"
now that seems to have worked
 
There is nothing faster than c, well maybe Fortran
 
finally found the bug in my code. INT_MAX is not 2^32
 
12:54 AM
@MooingDuck (2^32) - 1?
now if only I could fix my depth buffering code, then I would have been one productive llama today
 
Xeo
@CaptainGiraffe C++.
 
@DeadMG yeah, and with iterative division, that was adding up
 
oh
also, shouldn't that be (2^31) - 1? int is signed, after all
 
@Xeo E=mc^2
 
@CaptainGiraffe C != c
 
12:56 AM
3 mins ago, by Captain Giraffe
There is nothing faster than c, well maybe Fortran
"c"
 
Xeo
@DeadMG Maybe you should just start a new project and play around with the depth buffer in isolation?
 
@DeadMG Fortran is not a speed measurement Thanks
 
@Xeo But then it would work! and I would have no idea wtf was different
 
Xeo
Well, then copypasta from the toy project to your Real Thing
 
hmm
that Might Workâ„¢
 
12:59 AM
oh there's my other bug. When I did multi-digit subtraction it would "borrow" by adding one to the digit to the left. Instead of taking one.
finally
 
that reminds me I need to commit
 
I knew something was wrong when 4-4 = 1.
 
Xeo
Mooing, whatcha working on?
 
man, I have a serious problem
my reaction to "I should have gone to bed three hours ago" is "THEREFORE STAY UP ALL NIGHT AND SLEEP NONE OF THE THINGS!!!ONE!11"
when actually, the smart thing to do is grab the seven or eight hours I can get instead of bitching that I can't get my usual excessive 12 hours
 
1:04 AM
Didn't you have some Mensa thing tomorrow?
 
@DeadMG cacls?
 
today, now
 
(i.e. today)
 
Xeo
Reminds me, I didn't sleep in 36h
 
Better get some decent sleep if you want to score high.
 
1:04 AM
well
I sure feel good that I finally fixed my damn machine
 
icacls now, it'd seem.
 
@Xeo short term is arbitrary division, two unsigneds devided by one unsigned. Long term is a fixed point class. (Not up-casting, because not all types have something to up-cast too. Will add up-casting specializations once this works)
 
that's gotta count for something
 
What, everyone's going away? Don't leave me alone!
 
Listening to Mozart violin concertos shortly before taking an IQ test will raise your score.
 
1:05 AM
I'm still here.
 
I've got Jeremy Soule, that should be close enough
 
Xeo
And have a good amount of alcohol intus, even though I don't feel anything from half a bottle of Havanna... And I didn't drink before, evar.
 
Trying Gratuitous Space Battles and hoping I won't fail miserably at fleet construction this time around.
 
The Mozart effect can refer to: * A set of research results that indicate that listening to Mozart's music may induce a short-term improvement on the performance of certain kinds of mental tasks known as "spatial-temporal reasoning;" * Popularized versions of the hypothesis, which suggest that "listening to Mozart makes you smarter", or that early childhood exposure to classical music has a beneficial effect on mental development; * A US trademark for a set of commercial recordings and related materials, which are cl...
TLDR: It's not really true.
 
Aren't the Liszt trancendentals appropriate for 03-14
 
1:06 AM
@CatPlusPlus That's by that guy that changed from std::list to raw arrays and had a gynormous speed improvement, therefore STL sucks.
 
What guy?
 
Xeo
Oooh, you weren't there?
 
@cliffski, UK
Founder of Positech Games, Maker of Gratuitous Space Battles, indie dev blogger and ranter...
5.1k tweets, 3.1k followers, following 31 users
This one.
 
I recall the situation vaguely.
 
I'm going for La Campanella
 
1:07 AM
Oh, cliffski.
Whatever.
The game is fun.
It could be written in Java for all I care.
 
Dec 12 '11 at 15:58, by jalf
switched from STL list to a fixed sized array for some stuff, and speed is up by a factor of 100. I expected maybe just double :D
 
Like in Stroustrup's talk.
 
Tip for music if anyone is celebrating 3.14 youtube.com/watch?v=vwc-nmyPm4I
 
What's 3.14?
 
my excellent contribution to that discussion
Dec 12 '11 at 16:05, by DeadMG
I love picked onions
 
1:11 AM
One of Liszts transendentals
 
Oh, you mean 14/3?
 
Pie day
 
@RMartinhoFernandes A rational number.
 
There's no 14th month, silly.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes I can't find anywhere where he says STL is bad, just "Who knew how careless I could be using STL lists eh?"
 
1:12 AM
Sry I'm european your tricks doesnt work on me
 
@CatPlusPlus Yes, there is. Ask the accountants.
 
Ask the babies and their mothers.
 
14? I know there's "13th month bonus" or somesuch, but never heard about it getting up to 14.
 
It goes up to 15.
 
We get a 14th month bonus at work.
 
1:13 AM
cliffski: "Every place I worked uses STL for this sort of stuff. Writing your own linked list code will likely make ti inefficient, buggy and generally will waste time. "
 
the 14th month is the one you spend on holiday! mwaahahaha
 
Or hardware.
 
fuck, why am I still awake?
 
fuck, why am I still alive
 
1:14 AM
@MooingDuck Well, he sure didn't come across as smart.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes I clicked that link twice because I thought it wigged out the first time
 
Also, he copy-pastes code that uses void*.
 
@CaptainGiraffe How are we supposed to know?
 
@StackedCrooked I'm a poor disguise for the Chinese room
 
gah! And my code carried when it didn't need too instead of when it did. Fail
 
1:20 AM
@DeadMG hey
 
@RMartinhoFernandes huh
 
Why are you still awake?
 
watching movie review
 
1:28 AM
woo! My fixed point math passes some test cases! Time to go home!
 
You're at work?
 
@RMartinhoFernandes yes. In general, I only SO at work
 
I thought that fixed point thing was not for work.
 
Nah, I suck at GSB.
It needs a good spreadsheet.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes I tend to stay an extra half hour to hour after work to code my own stuff, because once I get home I play games
here, I'm in the programming mindset
 
1:31 AM
right
I am finally going to fucking sleep, I promise
 
Lol.
Liar.
 
Xeo
I swear, the time when I can finally fully understand standard clause 13, I'll be a happy C++ coder.
 
I'm a happy C++ coder and I don't even know what clause 13 is.
 
@Xeo seems unlikely
 
Okay, I lie, but that's because of the tools.
 
Xeo
1:32 AM
@CatPlusPlus Overload resolution
Or rather, overloading in general
13.3 is overload resolution
 
I'm not in a dorfy mood, so time for some Deus Ex.
 
Xeo
I'm not in cody mood, so time for some InitSleepEx.
 
It fails repeatedly.
 
Xeo
G'night.
 
Right. As if we believe it.
 
Xeo
1:34 AM
37h of staying awake
I think I might just fall asleep from that
 
Yeah, you're going to pass out soon enough anyway.
 
Xeo
I just hope that the state of not feeling anything from half a bottle of rum will not change during sleep
 
*Main> carveRoom (2,2) (3,3) allWalls
##########
##########
##...#####
##...#####
##...#####
##########
##########
##########
##########
##########
*Main>
Woot!
 
1:52 AM
@Xeo Now you need to listen to music like this.
With red-shot eyes and a forced grin.
 
@RMartinhoFernandes What is that?
 
@Pubby It's a dungeon, with a 3x3 room at (2,2).
# are walls, . are floors.
 
I mean the other stuff
 
What other stuff?
 
*Main> carveRoom (2,2) (3,3) allWalls
Unless that also happens to be part of the dungeon
 
2:00 AM
That's me asking GHCi to carve that room.
 
Is it for DF or some roguelike?
 
4 hours ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Whatever, I'm taking up the 7DRL challenge. Been wanting some interesting project to write some Haskell. Now, let's shop for UI libs.
Some roguelike.
 
Ah, cool. Been wanting to enter, but too busy right now
What type is it? Rogue? Band?
 
I still don't know.
I only decided to do this 4 hours ago.
Accepting ideas.
 
One idea I've always had was to have an AI play the first few levels of the game before you, so you start out 'in progress'
Not sure if it's really feasible though
 
That could be faked with an extra pass in the generation of the first few levels, and pretending you get amnesia.
:P
 
Heh, yeah
 
> Evil Overlord Roguelike – A horde of adventurers are attacking. To stop them from coming, place towers that shoot ranged attacks, camps that house attacking monsters, and traps. Come out personally to deal with the invaders and collect their treasure, but if you die, it takes time to respawn.
I like this idea. But I'm not sure how to make it work.
 
Sounds like dungeon keeper
 
2:24 AM
Dungeon Keeper II, god where's the time.
That was a fun game.
Slap your minions in order to make them work harder. But not too much or you'll kill them.
And the mistresses liked being beaten.
Yet they still died if you beat them too much.
 
2:44 AM
@Xeo That's funny, I purposefully avoid that clause to remain a happy C++ coder.
 
2:55 AM
@RMartinhoFernandes Is this a bad time to talk C++ lol?
 
I don't know how much that challenge is taking your attention.
 
It's ok, I'm going to sleep soon anyway. I've been mostly reading stuff and making throw-away experiments.
 
That link to the libc++ implementation of std::tuple from HH has left me thinking about tuples.
Right now it almost seems like recursion can be avoided in many cases for both runtime and compile-time.
Also I think you can do funny tricks if you use an 'interesting' indices<Indices...> pack together with an std::tuple<T...>, like slicing or the like. I'll investigate that at some point.
 
3:02 AM
i.e. get<Indices>(std::forward<Tuple>(tuple))... is a valid expansion as long as each Indices is in range.
So pass indices<0, 2, 4, 6> and then you get every other element from the tuple.
 
Ah.
Not sure how useful that would be, though.
 
Yes, needs investigation.
I've been stumped once or twice on how to handle some parts of a tuple 'specially' though.
In one case I decided to use indices<0, Indices...> in the deduction 'pattern' of a function template: the template only matches non-empty tuples.
Eh, it's time I relax, not think about code. Too much.
 
Man, sometimes GHC errors remind me of C++ template errors.
(The sole difference being that GHC actually includes useful information)
 
3:51 AM
Ok, I got a basic level generator running. Going to sleep now.
 
4:16 AM
Go back to sleep.
 
4:40 AM
Hello?
@LucDanton Do you know by any chance why this weird message would occur?
1>c:\users\cc\documents\visual studio 2010\projects\cs340_3\cs340_3\parser.cpp(5): error C2039: 'read_file' : is not a member of 'std::vector<_Ty>'
1> with
1> [
1> _Ty=std::string
1> ]
 
I'm guessing that you didn't really call v.read_file() on an std::vector<std::string> v;, that'd be too easy.
 
vector<string> parser::read_file(string fName)
it's afuncttion
@LucDanton I tried searching the error but it seems there are multiple cases and i have trouble understanding such jargon as is :(
 
Is that while line 5 looks like? I.e. it's the definition of the read_file member?
 
It's really small. I'm not sure what you were asking :(
 
Line numbers? Errors point at lines...
I.e. you have an error on line 5 if I can read that error correctly.
 
4:49 AM
line five is the "{" below the function name
@LucDanton
nvm, it is the function miscounted :O
@LucDanton It's weird though because this shows up for other parts such as :
1>c:\users\cc\documents\visual studio 2010\projects\cs340_3\cs340_3\grid.h(26): error C2208: 'std::vector<_Ty>' : no members defined using this type
1> with
1> [
1> _Ty=std::vector<std::string>
1> ]
And i didn't define the "string" (Regular c++ implementation)
 
I have a question @LucDanton Do you define methods of a class.h differently if they're static methods? E.g.
return_type class::name(param){ } //is normal
 
It's the same. You can look at my above example.
 
Omg this is absolutely frustrating, i took out the "class::" from "class::name" and it got rid of those particular sets of errors but the issue with "String" remains... do you think it hates vector or something? @LucDanton
 
If you just do std::vector<std::string> parse(std::string) { /* blah */ then you define an unrelated non-member function
 
4:59 AM
@LucDanton i figured :( but i have absolutely no clue why it's hating on me right now otherwise.. -_- have you seen this error before?
 
No.
 
Looks like firefox finally killed my machine - after 57 days without rebooting...
 
Oh boy, do I really have 24 day uptime on this.
 
@LucDanton It claims that the methods of the parser.cpp aren't in parser.h O.O
i hovered over the error lines squiggled underneath the text
Oh wait i think
i got it
@LucDanton Lol so you help noobs like I in the future apparantly it didn't like the fact that i had a similar name further in the code as the #define name
 
Gonna do updates and then reboot... It got the point where firefox started freezing every application that used the network... for a few seconds at a time - every few seconds...
*Oh, and I'm chatting through my laptop...
 
5:04 AM
Why no reboot?
 
I'm doing updates right now.
Machine's been on for 57 days
haven't done Windows update in a while.
 
I mean why was it on for 57 days? (hopefully not updating that entire time!)
 
I hate closing and reopening all my stuff - 4 monitors of it
the last time I shut it down was to clean out the dust and replace the Northbridge fan.
 
Can't you set it to reopen it on boot?
 
That's funny, my one machine with so much uptime is my laptop. My glorious desktop gets to rest every night or close to.
 
5:06 AM
That works for firefox. But not with all the other random things that I have open.
The record uptime I've had on any computer was 8 months on a laptop.
It sat at home as a torrent server - doing nothing at all but letting me remote in and torrent.
 
Doesn't that kill it?
 
@Pubby Torrents?
 
No, 8 months
 
Windows finally ate itself...
 
Guess you really were serious with ' torture the hell out of them.'
 
5:09 AM
From what appeared to be memory leaks...
I had like a 6GB pagefile and kept on increasing it every few weeks...
 
Ew.
 
Eventually, when I got back home for vacation.
I tried opening the lid.
And the act of trying to turn on the screen... well... froze it.
I generally having a hard time keeping my main computer on for more than about 50 - 60 days. Something eventually freezes it. Occasionally, I overrun the memory because I miscalculated a micro-benchmark - and it stalls until I hard reset.
My workstations have no trouble running for 100+ days since I don't have as much crap open.
 
-1
Q: Circumventing a EULA by editing the installer in-memory so the EULA says somethign different

Fake NameI tend to think a lot of the EULAs in modern software are a bit obnoxious and toxic in their limitations. However, I want to use the software. As a result, I have taken to modifying the installer with a debugger so the EULA test says something different, or the "I agree" checkbox says something...

lol
 
awesome
Belongs on SO. :)
Time to reboot... And that usually takes freaking forever...
 
"Guys, I just accepted the terms of my own contract, what's the legality here?"
 
5:24 AM
So he thinks that hacking out the EULA will get around it?
 
Mmmh I thought about writing an answer to that question but in fact I'm not so sure about the status of installers. I don't think all software licenses also cover the installer.
Not that this will achieve anything of course.
 
and my machine is stilllll rebooting...
about the only time it needs an SSD badly...
and it's finally back up... geez what was that 10 min.?
 
Is a license covers the installer, how are you supposed to accept the license by using the installer without first agreeing to it?
This is tricky.
 
hmm, that's a tough one...
wow... my machine suddenly feels a lot faster... lol
 
So I guess that's why some people wanted 'shrinkwrap licenses' (is that the term?) to close over that kind of thing.
 
5:31 AM
I hate eulas
 
I solved that problem by not agreeing to anything I don't agree with.
The simplicity of that system is its beauty. And vice-versa.
 
I hate bosses.
So annoying.
Waaaaaaah.
 
Business bosses or video game bosses?
Or "like a boss" bosses?
 
How do words work. What do two parties do with a contract, do they agree on it? You can use the word contract as a verb but obviously not with itself, i.e. you don't contract a contract.
 
6:03 AM
Make a contract?
 
That's ambiguous -- writing a contract is also making a contract, isn't it?
Mmmh that question was not done tongue-in-cheek, it really is looking for a serious discussion.
 
 
2 hours later…
Xeo
8:35 AM
Mornin
 
8:54 AM
If anyone wants some free flag weight (or whatever it's called now)
0
A: Cross-platform, cross-browser way to play sound from Javascript?

think123I think so too! I think so tooI think so too! I think so tooI think so too! I think so tooI think so too! I think so tooI think so too! I think so tooI think so too! I think so tooI think so too! I think so tooI think so too! I think so tooI think so too! I think so tooI think so too! I think so ...

And this one as well - basically a copy/paste of the accepted answer + spam:
0
A: How to send 100,000 emails weekly?

think123Short answer: While it's technically possible to send 100k e-mails each week yourself, the simplest, easiest and cheapest solution is to outsource this to one of the companies that specialize in it (I did say "cheapest": there's no limit to the amount of development time (and therefore money) tha...

 
Xeo
9:13 AM
Vote to delete
 
I already flagged for a moderator to destroy the user.
3 spam answers.
 
Xeo
"sadly" not the kind of spam to flag as "spam" on SO
 
the user probably won't get destroyed since it has a few legitimate questions. But will probably get a warning.
The "I think so too!" is spam flag worthy.
The spam flag doesn't require that it links male-enhancement drugs or designer bags.
 
Xeo
In any case, vote to delete it
That way, it's gone faster
 
Right, it shows up in the delete tab.
 
9:21 AM
I think spammers should be flogged before being deleted.
Anyway,
0
A: DevC++ Linker Errors

Cheers and hth. - AlfLink with the library that provides the missing functions.

^ I answered yet another question, hurray! :-)
 
Xeo
@CheersandhthAlf We did
 
I should probably be more active in moderating.
I tend to hold back in a lot of cases - especially with close votes for fear of retaliation.
But if the OP is well below 125 rep, I'll close away anyway.
 
The "How to send emails" is particularly bad: moderator Tim Post added requirements that made the question seem more legitimate, requirements not in the OP's question
Also, earlier, moderator casperOne deleted crucial information from the question.
So I'm not sure it's a good idea to delete the question.
It is an example of moderators changing the meaning of a question, twice.
 
Xeo
@CheersandhthAlf Maybe they were in the comments?
@CheersandhthAlf I don't really see a change in the meaning with casper's edit. He just removed the unneeded information, imo
1481
Q: Hidden Features of C#?

Serhat ÖzgelThis came to my mind after I learned the following from this question: where T : struct We, C# developers, all know the basics of C#. I mean declarations, conditionals, loops, operators, etc. Some of us even mastered the stuff like Generics, anonymous types, lambdas, LINQ, ... But what are t...

No more vote buttons
 
The C++ book question is the only one that survives. :) The mods decided not to touch it since it would break half the internet.
 
9:31 AM
He dleted the information about what the mass e-mailing was about, and the context in which it would be done (a blog). That is crucial information (e.g. most blogging systems already provide the functionality for people to subscribe to notices). He also changed the impression that people would get from reading the question. In short, he changed the question to a different question.
 
Hilarious how that question was auto-locked/deleted for picking up 6 spam flags.
And then Jeff undeleted it an hour later.
 
Maybe I should mention for @shog9 's benefit: changing the meaning and impression of questions is not what moderators are elected to do
For that matter, deleting correct answers that in their opinion are too concise, is not what they're elected to do
 
clearly all the mods are asleep :)
Since those two spam answers are still live.
I think if someone actually put a spam flag on it, it will get higher priority since they stand out a lot more than the flood of normal flags.
 
Xeo
I did, on both
 
9:42 AM
I put a non-an-answer flag on the first one. And a moderator-private flag on the other asking to look at the account itself.
 
Xeo
I just noticed that our aliasing syntax seems to come from... C#
456
A: Hidden Features of C#?

BlackTigerXAliased generics: using ASimpleName = Dictionary<string, Dictionary<string, List<string>>>; It allows you to use ASimpleName, instead of Dictionary<string, Dictionary<string, List<string>>>. Use it when you would use the same generic big long complex thing ...

 

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