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Xeo
Xeo
12:00
@Potatoswatter Okay, not really purely functional
There are so many ways to try and defeat template purity, and they've already accounted for all of them… or most of them…
Xeo
Xeo
friend functions are a bit like state
What I want is a way to use those friend functions without ADL, which would trigger the specialization
@Xeo I'm just kidding, really. I've tried a whole slew of these kinds of tricks and never found anything that worked.
9
Q: Does C++ support compile-time counters?

PotatoswatterFor the purpose of introspection, sometimes I've wanted to automatically assign serial numbers to types, or something similar. Unfortunately, template metaprogramming is essentially a functional language, and as such lacks global variables or modifiable state which would implement such a counter...

does anyone kno of a good free PDF reader other than adobe?
@TheRarebit I don't suppose it's useful if I tell you Apple Preview or the KDE one…
12:05
@TheRarebit foxit
@thecoshman I thought you had to pay for Foxit now?
@TheRarebit :O I hope not!
I shall investigate...
(ಠ益ಠ)
@Potatoswatter cheers, I'll use that one on my mac back home :)
@thecoshman have no fear its still free :)
12:09
@TheRarebit You installed Adobe Reader on a Mac? XvD
I think so....I haven't been on it a while...that a fopar?
@TheRarebit awesome!
yay for half day!
I must have gotten it mixed up with another one that charges
hi, i'm studying for an c++ exam, in the last exam there was a question like this:
class A { public: void print() { std::cout << "A\n"; } };
Class B : public A {
	public: void print() { std:cout << "B\n"; }
};
void foo( A a ) { a.print(); }
int main( void ) { A a; foo( a ); }
what would it print, and why? what needs to be added to B for inheritance?
i think it prints A
@Zavior compile and execute it
12:16
but i cant figure out what needs to be added for inheritance
does it need to be virtual?
If you want to overload it then ye, that'll print A as you expect
you don't actually use class B at all in that example
yeah
but if there would be
uhm
A a = new B()
now, it would still print A
am i correct?
it won't compile
if it were virtual function, it would print b
12:20
without actually checking myself I'm fairly certain that'll happen
abyx: the code i pasted above?
oh yeh
you need it to be a pointer actually
@Zavior yep, both of them, btw
use codepad.org
yeah it doesnt, codepad.org/tZ922NqF
thats straight from an old exam though
12:23
so the answer would be, it wont print anything as it wont compile, eh
Class has a capital C
for Class B
oh, true
there should be #define Class class
thats pretty neat site to test things
mawning
12:31
why doesn't it print B? :|
because you only took an A in foo
why would it ever print anything except A? it's a value of type A
pass A by reference, foo(A& a)
i see
and it accepts b because its subtype of a
hrrr
...I'd got +50 for this answer
a reference or pointer, however, are not values and therefore may not necessarily refer or point to a value of type A
12:33
pointer is value
well, yes, but it's not the value you're calling the function on
the original question was: what would i need to change in A for inheritanec
i guess the answer is that it was lacking the 'virtual' keyword
but, what would i need to do to foo() then?
Xeo
Xeo
@Potatoswatter I found ways to achieve what I want through bugs in MSVC, GCC and Clang. So in theory, I could hack something together that allowed me to do what I want, but it's non-standard (atleast in 2 of 3 cases I know that) and could be fixed any moment
did one ever seen a C++ code with OOD, following SOLID, DRY principles?
mine
12:39
is it opensource?
=\ I want to see something beautiful... Not a crap that I'm writing now :(
is OOD "beautiful"?
yep, it can be
I believe
i cant even look at code that is non-OOD
find it really hard to digest it
feels like everything is "unorganized" and "helter skelter"
Xeo
Xeo
12:44
> If you read here you can see the last digit of Pi can be calculated so hurry up an write me the algorithm in C# .Net 3.5 mmmmmmk? watleyreview.com/2004/062904-3.html – Blowed Away 12 mins ago
it is organized, just not into objects
Xeo
Xeo
> so hurry up an write me the algorithm in C# .Net 3.5 mmmmmmk?
Could someone please shoot him?
lol
tell him his libraries must have a bug and he should be getting 3.14 back for PI
yes DeadMG, i know .. but its so hard to comprehend .. for example this piece of code: cvs.berlios.de/cgi-bin/viewvc.cgi/net-tools/net-tools/netstat.c (its actually the source code of netstat.. i was studying it ..)
@drunkMonk so in your world, there's OOP and "everything else"?
12:50
what i did was went to the main program, make a list of all functions that were being called, then look for the definitions of those functions .. and then try to make sense of the entire program
@jalf i think saying that would not be entirely wrong
@drunkMonk well, it is
@jalf so what do you suggest
@drunkMonk learning something new
@jalf well .. i did get myself a copy of "Real world haskell" last week .. but hadnt picked it up yet :P
@drunkMonk please make me unsee it
12:53
functional programming, or if you're using C++, generic programming.
@abyx make you unsee what sir
unstructured code is terrible, no argument there. But if you only know of one way to structure your code, then that means your own code will end up being unstructured any time you run into a problem that this one approach doesn't work for
I'm trying to implement dynamic polymorphism without virtual functions, can someone please take a look at pastebin.com/Z8GEpsmG
@UberGeek just don't do it
Xeo
Xeo
12:54
So, I took a look at it. What now?
I' m expecting a output of 16 and 8
@Abyx why?
Xeo
Xeo
Then your expectation is wrong.
you know the saying, if all you have is a hammer, then everything looks like a nail
Xeo
Xeo
sizeof(*this) - sizeof is a compile-time construct
The rest should clear up itself.
@Xeo dont you think the code would be more 'understandable ' if there were objects ..
12:55
@Xeo thanks
@UberGeek because C++ already has dynamic polymorphism
@drunkMonk There is a huge difference between some code "having objects in it", and some code being "object-oriented"
do you also build brick-oriented houses?
@Abyx I was asked to do this in a interview, couldn't , so I'm trying out now
@Xeo any way to find the object pointing to by the base class pointer at run time?
Do you read 'verb-oriented' books? or look at 'green-oriented' pictures?
@jalf you really do not think that code is easy to understand when everything is simply an interaction between a set of well defined objects .. compared to crazy function calls here and there ..
12:58
@jalf it's terminology
@drunkMonk I don't see the difference. How do your "well defined objects" interact, if not via "crazy function calls here and there"?
Xeo
Xeo
@drunkMonk C is also kind of object oriented, but you have to be explicit about it.
@jalf i find it easier to go thru an OOP codebase because i know where this function fits .. and can probably guess what it must be trying to do
if I had to point to the situation where I most often see "crazy function calls here and there", it's in traditional object-oriented code, where half your functions are virtual, everything is derived from a 5 levels deep inheritance hierarchy, and the end result is that when you call foo.bar(), you have no idea which bar() function actually ends up being called
@jalf thats a good point
13:00
@drunkMonk I don't see what that has to do with OOP. Why can you guess what a function tries to do when it is part of an OOP codebase, but not otherwise?
because its part of a class already ..
@drunkMonk and?
What does being part of a class have to do with guessing what it tries to do?
you see there is logical grouping
i love that
Xeo
Xeo
struct foo{
    // data
};

struct foo* create_foo(){ // ctor
    return (struct foo*)malloc(sizeof(foo));
}

void foo_do_something(struct foo* self){
    // ...
}

void destroy_foo(struct foo* self){ // dtor
    free(self);
}
So you're saying you can guess what foo.sort() does, but not sort(foo)?
13:01
no .. not exactly
"when you call foo.bar()" - you shouldn't bother about implementation behind bar
Xeo
Xeo
int main(){
  struct foo* pf = create_foo();
  foo_do_something(pf);
  destroy_foo(pf);
}
@drunkMonk and you can't group your code without being object-oriented?
yes i can jalf
and i do
If you're guessing what code does, you're doing it wrong.
13:02
i recently wrote a LARGE piece of perl codebase ..
I can write line noise, too.
Q@#$@#$*!N)#$*!@(CB&$B(!@$!@B$F(!@$, see.
and tried to make it behave as much as i could
Xeo
Xeo
// object oriented version:
class foo{
public:
foo(); // ctor
~foo(); // dtor

void do_something();

private:
// data
};

int main(){
foo* pf = new foo();
pf->do_something();
delete pf;
}
but what i am saying is that after 4 months i had a hard time figuring out my own work ... this dont happen when i work with c++
Xeo
Xeo
So, where's the big difference?
13:03
my point is simply that classes are useful for providing abstractions. Little bundles of logic which do something, and do it well, and where the client can't break it, and doesn't need to look into its internals. Classes are great for that. But the main logic flow of my application isn't "classes interacting with other classes", but "me interacting with classes". The program flow is not "now my Foo object runs", but "my foo function runs, and it might use the Bar and Baz objects to do its thing"
@jalf e.g. anemic design
hmm i agree
std::vector is a nice example. It's a dynamic array, and it's really good at being a dynamic array. It provides a wonderful abstraction of an object I can use in my code. But by itself, it doesn't do anything, and I would never write a "vector-oriented" application
Xeo
Xeo
gaaah, damn markdown, format the code!
Having hard time to figure out Perl might have to do with Perl being fucking useless.
13:04
@CatPlusPlus or with Perl being a write-only language
@Abyx what is?
@CatPlusPlus it suited the application ..
@jalf stackoverflow.com/search?q=anemic - it's exactly what you described, "when procedural code manages objects"
@Xeo Use the 'fixed font' button.
0
Q: Calling Member Functions within Main C++

user40120#include <iostream> using namespace std; class MyClass { public: void printInformation(); }; void MyClass::printInformation() { return; } int main() { MyClass::printInformation(); fgetc( stdin ); return(0); } /* How would I call the printInformation function ...

^ The cluelessness of some people..
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus I did!
13:08
@Abyx any idea about what I asked?
@Abyx shrug. I don't think OOP is the holy grail, and so I don't really care what OOP zealots consider to be an anti-pattern. This design is only anemic if you think that code outside of a class "doesn't count", which is absurd nonsense
Why is code more valuable when it's inside a class than outside it?
if the code is structured the same way, and is just as reusable and maintainable and does the same thing?
@jalf no one said code is more valuable when it's inside a class than outside it
@drunkMonk People who call it "anemic" do.
Which just goes to show how utterly toxic the whole "design patterns" movement is. A bunch of people making a religion out of some rules that aren't general enough to be applied universally, but now that they're a religion, people are willing to die to defend them, and to ensure that no one ever deviates from them
Fuck them
13:11
@UberGeek use function pointers.
There is absolutely no difference between foo.bar() and bar(foo), except for syntax sugar.
Haskell typeclasses eat OOP for breakfast.
@CatPlusPlus that doesn't sound healthy
empty calories
@jalf you have just defined fascism
^^
Daily intake.
@CatPlusPlus It's funnier if you call it POO
13:13
Now that doesn't sound healthy.
@drunkMonk fascism is empty calories?
I eat pieces of shit like you for breakfast!
@jalf procedural code is not as reusable and maintainable as OO code because of lack of encapsulation and abstraction. virtual void foo() and static void foo(A*) are completely different things
procedural != generic
@Abyx huh? I can't encapsulate or abstract code unless I use OO?
That is news to me
Xeo
Xeo
13:15
@drunkMonk: Tell me if you can see any significant difference here, other than being explicit / implicit in the operations on the objects: ideone.com/3El9I
And as @keithlayne said, I'm not talking about procedural code. What is it about those OOP zealots who think that only two kinds of code exist: OOP and C?
C code is ugly. But that does not make OOP any less ugly.
OOP and assembly!
Also you can do OOP with C.
You just don't get the sugar.
that actually sounds healthier
I can do OOP with assembly %)
@jalf "Which just goes to show how utterly toxic the whole "design patterns" movement is. A bunch of people making a religion out of some rules that aren't general enough to be applied universally, but now that they're a religion, people are willing to die to defend them, and to ensure that no one ever deviates from them"
this defined fascism
13:17
And honestly, I'll take procedural code with no encapsulation and abstraction than OOP code full of abstract factories, singletons and other crappy 'design patterns'.
Every day.
(after I did it once, I understood that I never should write in assembly again)
don't forget the beans
@jalf yep, you can't because will encapsulation and abstraction it will be OO
no there is no difference ..
13:20
@Abyx er... no
only if (1) you use objects to encapsulate and abstract, and (2) you structure your entire application to be, well, "object-oriented" (hence the name).
creating a single object which provides some kind of encapsulation hardly makes the entire application OOP
now, here's the big shock that will completely burst your bubble and let reality pour in: Ready to have your mind blown? Non-OOP langauges have mechanisms for encapsulation and abstraction too, and they're not called "objects"
ba-ba-baaaammmmmm!
Also, generic programming is way more powerful than OOP.
AMAGAD IMPOSSIBUL
Or maybe 'expressive' is the better word.
now, do some reading, please. Try using a language that doesn't lock you into this little cage you call "OOP"
I'd happily go for both
13:23
@jalf you should define "object" first
it was a half-decent idea back in the 70's as a band-aid to freshen up procedural languages a bit, but this is 2011. Wake up
@Abyx No, I don't think I need to, because there is no way the abstraction mechanisms of a functional language could be called "an object"
but if you like, we can call it "an entity with some internal state inaccessible to users of the entity, and a customize public interface through which users can interact with it"
ok, algebraic types are not OO classes.
but what about C++ ?
@Abyx what about it?
haskell is cool, but what should I use instead of OOD in C++ ?
You said it was impossible to achieve encapsulation or abstraction without using OOP. You never said anything about C++
13:27
at least I meant imperative languages
@Abyx generic programming, which incidentally uses objects where it makes sense. Free functions where it makes sense. Functional constructs where it makes sense. You can even abuse the compilation model to achieve encapsulation where it makes sense. Instead of putting internal state inside a class, put it inside a .cpp file. The header is your interface, and there is no way for callers to see the state inside the .cpp file
use the tools you have available
Xeo
Xeo
6
Q: C++11 / g++ : std:: qualifier required in lambda, although "using namespace std" is given

Piotr99I was trying to discover some of the goodies of the new C++11 standard (using g++ 4.6.2). Playing around with lambdas in a an "all_of" algorithm function, I encountered a strange problem with the std:: qualifier. I am "using" the std namespace as shown at the beginning of the code snippet. This...

^why GCC sucks
@jalf can you unit-test such program?
function pointers (or std::function, if you're feeling posh) are also a very nice way to achieve abstraction without classes or virtual functions, and definitely have their place
@Abyx easily. OOP code is some of the hardest to unit test
Much much easier to unit test a free function than a class
Or a singleton.
Xeo
Xeo
13:30
The only problem I have with C++ is that foo(bar) and bar.foo() are not equal, e.g. do not call the same function. That would make generic programming way easier imho. But I may be missing something.
Or abstract static factory with inversion of control and dependency injection.
Or whatever that's called these days.
@Xeo that's the only problem you have with C++?
const int * var < this is a pointer that will always be pointing to an int, right?
int * const var < this will always be pointing to the same variable?
@jalf but free function has hard-coded dependencies, you won't pass anything as template parameters or function pointers
const int* is a pointer to const, int* const is a const pointer.
13:32
@jalf Arguably, of course, std::function is implemented as a class and virtual functions
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG Not necessarily. Templated functions and function pointers + void* work equally well
Template free functions have less dependencies than member functions relying on concrete interfaces.
Xeo
Xeo
Which is incidently what Boost does
mmmh, I'd prefer virtual functions to that
@Zavior const int* var == int const* var != int * const var != int const* const var
Xeo
Xeo
13:34
@jalf Well, that, and that you can't find out if a template is instantiated yet. But OTOH I can't think of anything else. I'm sure that I'm forgetting something though.
@Abyx I don't follow. Why is af ree function more hardcoded than a member function?
and why wouldn't I pass template params or function pointers?
@DeadMG yup, but I think there's a big difference between "is a class", and "is OOP"
@jalf with IFoo& I can pass 10 virtual functions which can be used inside Bar's member functions.
@jalf agreed
@Abyx So what? @jalf can do the exact same thing by passing a pointer to an array of function pointers
It's a shame that OOP maps easily into the brains of people that shouldn't program.
Xeo
Xeo
Oh great. I have to babysit my little brother again today. From in about an hour till tonight. charges his ipod touch
13:39
@DeadMG yep, or 10 parameters
@Abyx and I can have 10 different overlaods of Foo(), which work with different Bar implementations
or use a template
Or I can pass in a functor or a function pointer
@keithlayne pls explain that shit statement of yours
@jalf 10 ftors
13:40
hey good fellow I wasn't talking shit so chill out
@Abyx or one, which does what I need
In any case, I never said "thou shalt never use virtual"
@drunkMonk hey man, if I wanted to direct something at you, I would do so.
although, to be honest, it's been a long time since I wrote a virtual function myself
@keithlayne i think you were .. so wouldcare to explain
I just haven't needed it
13:41
@drunkMonk I told you I wasn't
i am offended because OOP does tend to map easily for me
Xeo
Xeo
I just noticed that the author of Boost.Format seems to be a Python guy. All member functions forward to free functions of the form R func(format* self, ...).
oh...
@drunkMonk if you are a programmer (which usually means that you would grasp these things more easily than most) then of course it does
I'm using inheritance for my AST
I think that's a fairly natural mapping
13:42
@drunkMonk He said "people who can't program tend to find OOP intuitive", but not "peole who find OOP intuitive can't program"
but there are a lot of people out there who can barely grasp OOP, and it's all they can understand
this I think is dangerous, because at school they will teach down to these folks
and it leads to things like...Java
@drunkMonk this is a good discussion, and the point is that there are other ways to do it
dear god why
const int*const Method3(const int*const&)const;
another thing I hate is this notion that virtual is the only type of polymorphism
2
13:44
that's way too many const in one place
i gave up java the day i learned about "beans"
eh
beans are not an inherently bad thing
just like re-using design patterns isn't an inherently bad thing
I like refried beans, for example
but nobody who has the opportunity can use them responsibly
@keithlayne I prefer reified beans, but we won't have those in Java...
13:46
Design patterns are supposed to address the shortcomings of software design versus things like engineering disciplines, to avoid reinventing the wheel.
But they haven't had that effect
@KerrekSB I'm supposed to have exclusive use of bean jokes for the rest of the hour. You'll be hearing from my lawyer :)
@keithlayne www.hasbean.co.uk
To confirm: There are infinitely many possible copy constructor signatures, as long as they are all callable with one argument, correct?
I.e. Foo(Foo const&, int = 1, bool = false, char = 'a') is a copy constructor?
yes
Xeo
Xeo
yes
And as long as the first parameter is of the class type and an lvalue reference.
of course, if you were to actually have any more than one of them in a class, you'd get an ambiguity error
@Xeo And not an rvalue reference
@KerrekSB it's like coffee-mation, that is amazing
13:54
I see. That's good. Not sure if useful, but good to know. I don't know why the non-const reference isn't forbidden now, but I guess that'd break old code...
@DeadMG Sure, at most one may be defined at any time.
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG Right, specified that
cpx
cpx
hmm
@DeadMG Oh, what about Foo(Foo const &&)?
Xeo
Xeo
@KerrekSB It's especially useful for SFINAE. I wonder if that was the reason they allowed it...
@KerrekSB "move" ctor
@KerrekSB That's a move constructor.
13:55
@Xeo Oh, good point
Xeo
Xeo
A useless one though
cpx
cpx
how would you use the latter three parameters?
@cpx Well, other contexts may wish to recycle the same constructor: Foo b(a), c(a, 2);
@Xeo Totally useless? It could be called on the return value of a function returning a const value...
Xeo
Xeo
3
A: Is it a good idea of maintaining "const-ness" as much as possible?

Steve Jessop(1) and (3) are closely related. A by-value parameter is just a local variable with that name, as is the result of your computation. Usually it makes little difference in short functions whether you mark local variables const or not, since you can see their entire scope right in front of you. Yo...

I just searched for that answer :>
@KerrekSB And what use would that be?
@Xeo No idea! Given that this is C++, I bet someone somewhere has contrived a situation where this comes up :-)
13:59
well, if you wish to distinguish between a const lvalue and a const rvalue...
assuming someone was stupid enough to make a const rvalue in the first place
Xeo
Xeo
Oh, wait, I remember there was a use for T const&&.
It was to disable a certain overload
I can't remember of what though
Maybe std::move..
@Xeo Yes, in std::move I think.
Xeo
Xeo
lol. my answer exists for 50 seconds, 4 upvotes.
-3
Q: Why do we C++ programmers hate Java?

user8451441I'm myself a C++ programmer. I don't know much about java. I'm looking for some quick tips to get me started so I can hate java and defend my programming language. Can anyone get started and give their opinions?

win
Xeo
Xeo
> Just come to the SO C++ channel and we will gladly fill you in on why if Java had proper garbage collection, it would collect itself. – DeadMG 23 secs ago
7
^win
lol, deleted
Bastards.
14:02
but now the OP can't see my recommendation!
Xeo
Xeo
Yeah, best invite him to the chat
wow, they didn't take long to delete it
Xeo
Xeo
Ah damn, starring it won't do any good. :<
Damn. I was 12 rep away from hardcap, and then I get 12 upvotes on an answer... whyyyyy
All that poor wasted rep..
I don't get 12 upvotes in a month
so quit yer bitchin'
why do you care?
Xeo
Xeo
14:08
I'm a repwhore.
@Xeo Hm, actually I can't find this now, neither in forward nor in move. Maybe it was something old, pre-standard.
Xeo
Xeo
@KerrekSB I don't think it was in the standard. Maybe I saw it while digging through either VC's stdlib or libc++
I don't believe there is any current use of const T&&
(ooh, sudden rep surge -- sometimes you get nothing for days, and sometimes all sorts of old answers get accepted)
Xeo
Xeo
I'm grateful that accepted answer rep doesn't count towards the daily cap
14:11
nothing's better than a grateful whore
Tin
Tin
@LucDanton, hi, I followed your suggestion given here => http://pastebin.com/eYGCEFAX However, for the 2nd way to fill the vector, I get the following compiler error: error C2039: 'clone' : is not a member of 'std::unique_ptr<_Ty>', as for the 3rd way to fill the vector, I get the following compiler error:1>src\shape.cpp(49): error C2143: syntax error : missing ',' before ':'
1>src\shape.cpp(49): error C2530: 'p' : references must be initialized
1>src\shape.cpp(49): error C3531: 'p': a symbol whose type contains 'auto' must have an initializer. Any suggestions?
you need p->clone()
@Xeo The problem is that the rep cap should tell me to get back to work. However, with the "accept"-exception, it's telling me "write better answers so they get accepted"... :-S
i have absolutely no clue :|
Wtf? "I want to find a blog"??
14:17
thats and old exam question
Tin
Tin
@DeadMG, thanks! p->clone() worked for the 2nd case. I tried to replace p.clone() with p->clone() for the 3rd case, but still have some compiler error message
it looks fine to me, but i guess there is supposed to be something wrong
@Zavior for one thing, delete &i; would be unnecessary if the class used RAII. Also, should have a virtual destructor.
what is RAII?
who's got a faq link for RAII?
14:24
i found it
i suppose the lack of destructor is one thing
ill read up on RAII, maybe it will clarify things, tanks
I don't think that (RAII) is probably what they're looking for.
but it's a good thing to read about
yeah, i got three 3 old exams im going through, one of them has questions about raii
I'm sure I had an RAII FAQ link but I think I let it go out of scope.
Dude... I just rewrote part of my little physics engine (basic gravity) from normal C++ to SSE intrinsics and got a factor 7 performance improvement.
and -95% readablility
14:36
I wouldn't say so.
@Abyx You a Java developer or something?
@StackedCrooked no, I'm C++ developer
Very good.
Is it me, or has there been a slight change to the caption?
@IntermediateHacker yep, it was
14:40
lol, kinda ironic
one can't agree that he's regular
one can't agree that he's straight normal either.
anyway, who is "he"?
Xeo
Xeo
So, now my free time is over and I have to babysit my little brother. See you tomorrow.
Put him to bed.
@Xeo I feel ur pain. I've got two little brothers... :(
14:49
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: You're just an idiot. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
10 mins ago, by IntermediateHacker
Is it me, or has there been a slight change to the caption?
I know nothing.
then I guess You're just an idiot
An idiot is somebody with such severe mental retardation that he is unable to move away from danger.
Or something like that.
So if you keep poking him he'll go "aye! aye! aye! .." and suffer pain without realizing that he could simple move away from you.
somebody with such severe mental retardation that he is unable to move away from danger that's exactly what people say about me someone I know.
14:54
@IntermediateHacker I know somebody who is also like that.
@StackedCrooked who?

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