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00:01
Looks like a bug to me, but then again it's 1am and I don't know numpy *shrug*
do you really want to end up with an array containing bytes?
that's just icky
why not use an array of dtype uint8 or something and work with values?
I figured bytes are easy to concatenate. I call b''.join(output.flatten()) and get the output I want
so....flatten the ints and map bytes over that?
Works, but creates a lot of unnecessary lists: b''.join(bytes([x]) for x in img.flatten())
I was looking for a solution that uses more numpy I guess; this is basically just a boring everyday list comprehension :P
hmm
yeah, I don't usually use strings or bytes with numpy
yeah, what you're doing is probably fine
I didn't realize it was native python's bytes that was behaving odd
fun fact though:
In [74]: img2 = img.astype(np.uint8)

In [75]: img2.dtype = '|S1'

In [76]: img2
Out[76]:
array([[[b'\x01', b'', b''],
        [b'', b'\x02', b'']]],
      dtype='|S1')
this is equally wrong to what you had originally
00:11
Yeah, really looks like a bug in numpy to me
no
In [77]: bytes(0)
Out[77]: b''

In [78]: bytes(1)
Out[78]: b'\x00'
^ that's not numpy
yes but that's the expected output :P
oooooh I see what you mean :D
I originally thought bytes was the culprit too, so I kind of misled you there
In [83]: img.astype(np.uint8).tobytes()
Out[83]: b'\x01\x00\x00\x00\x02\x00'
I believe bytes(...) would give you the same instead of .tobytes() but I prefer the method
00:15
Oooh, that's very very nice. I'm stealing that, thank you~
please do ;)
of course you can directly pass dtype=np.uint8 when constructing an array if you want integer arithmetic
Unfortunately I'm not in charge of constructing the array. I get it as a parameter and have to work with it
OK, type conversion is fine too
00:44
does using list slicing like this create a extra copy in memory? "for el in arr[5:]: ..."
If it's a list, yes. If it's a numpy array, no.
If it's a list, don't call it arr
ah good point, thanks yes i was referncing a list
02:14
Hey guys. Quick question, sorry if I'm being bothersome
I'm reading one of the typing PEPs. There goes a line like "The Generic base class uses a metaclass that defines _The Generic base class uses a metaclass that defines a __getitem__ so that LoggedVar[t] is valid as a type". LoggedVar is a class subclassing Generic.
Why is this bit important? Why is getitem defined in a metaclass and why does that matter?
Eeck I double pasted that :D Sorry, I'm on my phone.
03:08
Hey guys! I just wanted to share that this is the day I found out that Threads in Python are not allowed to use more than 1 CPU core. It was funny and intriguing to see a program with heavy numeric computation use only 16% of my CPU. Fortunately, Multiprocessing is not that complicated and I was able to make the necessary adjustments. Now, with 8 cores reserved for this program my CPU lags a lot because of the 100% usage. uhauhAuhauhauhauh
 
4 hours later…
06:49
@karlphillip You can limit the usage of cores to a certain number IIRC.
Maybe not, it's the "process" count I got it confused with which doesn't seem the same technically. But you can find some good info here - stackoverflow.com/questions/42103367/…
07:08
guys can you use the str.upper method on index. e.g x = "pencil" How would I capitalise into "Pencil". x[0].upper() doesnt work
You can use it on a str, so essentially, if your array index value is a str then it can be capitalized.
@KOOTSHOOTS In your case, why not do x.title() instead?
>>> x = "pencil"
>>> x[0].upper()
'P'
>>> x.title()
'Pencil'
 
1 hour later…
08:14
@AshishNitinPatil because if x was a string with a few words, like "peanut butter jam". I just wanna capitalise the 'p' and not the b or the j
from my understanding, title() would capitalise all of P, B and J
x = x[0].upper() + x[1:]
@vaultah Thank you!
08:57
Cabbage
@KOOTSHOOTS x[0].upper() does work, but strings are immutable, so all the string methods return a new string. But I think you want the .capitalize method.
>>> s = "peanut butter jam"
>>> s.capitalize()
'Peanut butter jam'
Looks like the interpreter has a bias / more affection towards single quoted string representations
>>> '"\'"'
'"\'"'
>>> '"\''
'"\''
>>> '\'"'
'\'"'
>>> "'\""
'\'"'
>>> "\"'"
'"\''
@AshishNitinPatil Yes, it prefers single quotes, it only uses double-quotes when representing a string containing single quotes and no double quotes.
>>> "I've got double quotes", "This isn't \"double\" quoted"
("I've got double quotes", 'This isn\'t "double" quoted')
OTOH, json.dump uses double quotes, but that's required by JSON syntax.
09:17
>>> 'there are reasons not to use str.capitalize, PM 2Ring ;)'.capitalize()
'There are reasons not to use str.capitalize, pm 2ring ;)'
@vaultah Good point. But that's why I said "I think you want the .capitalize method". ;)
09:36
@PM2Ring I've realised it doesn't give OP what they want. Should I add the disclaimer or remove?
It still gives them the same thing, but as a 1D list, not a 2D one.
Well, I've added the disclaimer. Wondering whether I should remove.
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ How is it the same thing? It discards most of the items!
I've just added a couple of links from our Common Questions. But I don't think it's right to dupe-hammer with either of those targets, since the focus of the OP isn't about chunking a single list, but about how to do it with 2 (or more lists) without having redundant code.
@vaultah oooh, that's something I didn't know. Thanks.
I don't get what happened, that Q&A went through downvote hell
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ I guess you got some upvotes from people who thought your code looked nice & clean, but didn't immediately realise that it does the wrong thing...
Curiously, nobody's posted a solution using the old zip(*[iter(seq)] * chunksize), but it's mentioned in the links I posted.
Hey @cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ I saw in the transcript that you're a fan of Jethro Tull. Check out this cover of A New Day Yesterday by Yorkshire lass Chantel McGregor.
10:06
ooh, I'll check it out. Thanks :)
@PM2Ring And yeah, not just mine, someone downvoted every answer. Then, reversed it. Weird, really.
cbg, Reblochon!
Some people have odd ideas of how computers work: unix.stackexchange.com/questions/413844/…
How can I return a sequence of the same type as the one passed as argument? (it could be a string, List, Tuple, etc...)
what do you intend to do in the function?
10:14
Create a new sequence that is a transform of the input. I do not mutate the input.
I'd recommend having your API return a consistent result regardless of what you pass.
So, for example, you could return a generator.
@ReblochonMasque Use the type function.
Leave unpacking to the user.
>>> a = [1, 2, 3]
>>> b = type(a)()
>>> b
[]
^ That's nifty.
10:17
ok, will do, thank you - for some reasons I was overthinking this.
Thanks @PM2Ring
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ, yes, I know what you mean; in this specific case, I need a generic. (at least, I think I need one)
Here's a more useful example:
def double(seq):
    t = type(seq)
    return t([2*u for u in seq])
print(double({1,2,3}))
#output
{2, 4, 6}
@ReblochonMasque The problem with generics is that if you intend on putting the sequence back together (packing), then it's quite a tricky task
Unless you leave it to the caller function, since it'd (hopefully) know what type it is sending / expecting.
@PM2Ring Doesn't work for strings :)
I guess not. ;)
rbrb for an hour, time to walk the dogs, then I'll see if I can make it work with your proposed solutions. Thanks.
10:43
cbg
Ooo... an enthusiastic cbg :)
I am feeling good. I got a 50 bounty from alexce today.
pineapple
This was the answer. I explained why something would not work, instead of showing how.
thank you thank you.
11:06
Did you mean "melon melon" ?
That would be the salad equivalent, yes. Even though melon isn't commonly found in salads... hmm...
Or, as you englishmen would say, Ta!
11:33
Did you mean english puppy old chap? :)
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ That's always a good idea. Sure, it's good to show the OP the proper way to do stuff, but generally they also want to learn why their current code doesn't work correctly. And quite often their faulty code is due to a key misunderstanding of how the language works, so it's vital that that misconception gets corrected.
@JonClements Yes... english puppies, and english ninjas wearing christmas hats ;-)
calling @Martijn English, hey? Not sure whether he'll be happy with that or you should expect to start dodging some shurikens :)
In fact, that's why I didn't immediately hammer this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/48041639/… The dupe target shows a variety of ways to perform the OP's task (counting the number of inversions in a list by using a modified mergesort), but I figured it would be good for someone to give an answer that explains what's wrong with the OP's existing code. Paul's answer kinda does that.
@PM2Ring sound advice which I always follow first: putting OP's needs at a higher priority than their desire. I'd like to think that reflects my increased maturity on the site over the months.
@JonClements Sorry! He sounded english on his podcast :(
11:41
Helping others with your experience/knowledge/insights is a much better feeling than watching a number go up a bit :p
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Yep. I've noticed. :) It does slow down the answering process a little, though. So I usually just give a brief summary of the OP's problem, then describe my strategy, and post the code & output. Then I go back & expand on the explanation. I learned that trick from Martijn. :)
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ IIRC, you live in India. What's your ethnic background, if you don't mind me asking?
@JonClements Indeed! Both are gratifying, but the former, a lot more :p
@PM2Ring Probably English - everyone seems to be English today :p
@PM2Ring Not at all. I studied in an English medium school. But I usually converse in a one or more South Indian languages with friends/family.
I'm currently based overseas doing my MS in LA
LA? What time is it there? :p
(and do you ever sleep?)
11:47
(I'm back for vacation, should have mentioned that :p)
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Thanks. I have to say that your English is excellent, you probably make fewer mistakes than many native speakers. :)
@PM2Ring Thank you! I appreciate that. It must have something to do with the fact that both my parents are journalists who used to work for a reputed newspaper publisher here. They're excellent with spoken and written english as well, and I suppose it rubbed off on me.
I currently live in a part of Sydney which has a strong Chinese population, but for many years I lived very close to an ISKCON temple, so there were lots of people of Indian extraction in the neighbourhood, mostly from northern India, but a fair few from the south as well.
me engish iz gud 2!
South Indians generally have a better hold of English than North Indians do.
In fact, most parts of North India are Hindi medium or the regional language.
English is not usually introduced until grade 10, or even college.
@JonClements Hey dude, puppies can't speak :(
11:59
Tell that to Frank in Men In Black :)
The understanding was I was referring to puppies from Earth, unless that doesn't apply to you ;)
I exist in nightmares :)
Ah, good thing I don't sleep then.
@JonClements Replying to this comment, when the sea's in full swing, I usually don't sleep until 3AM
Typical youngsters :)
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Ah, ok. That would explain why the Gujarati members of SO keep reverting to their regional language in the SO chat rooms. :)
12:10
@PM2Ring I was going a pretty good job of forgetting about that - thanks for reminding me sighs :)
That SO Meta thread was a classic... if you like that kind of thing. ;)
I apologise on behalf of those guys. Some of us from the northern states can be very obnoxious.
Oh - yeah - it was amusing to watch no doubt... less fun when you've gotta be involved with it :)
I guess this could be closed as "was resolved in a manner that's unlikely to help future readers" stackoverflow.com/questions/48035051/…
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ don't think you have anything to apologise for anything on behalf of anyone...
12:16
Righto. I just wish they would be more considerate of other people. That selfish mentality is part of the culture here
In most parts of the world, pedestrians are given the right of way. Here, you'd just get mowed down if you're not careful.
Example...
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ What the puppy said. And I can totally sympathize with people who are proud of their culture & language. OTOH, English is the international language of programming, and so it's a bit silly for developers with poor English skills to insist that they don't need to improve their English.
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ well, I'm not massively surprised... I think the Indian driving licence isn't one that's recognised by the rest of the world or something...
Well, I have seen bad english speakers writing good code. But that's usually an exception to the rule.
And yes, it doesn't take much to get a license here. However, you do need nerves of steel to drive, especially on the highways.
Bet there's plenty more "good" English speakers that write beep code :)
More so in urban areas with a lot of traffic, where lane discipline is as real as unicorns.
12:23
Enough of that blasphemy... Unicorns are real!
(and I refuse to believe otherwise... next it'll be the tooth fairy and santa and stuff and I'm not sure I could handle that...)
The treat fairy
cabbage
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ I concur, you are only responsible for your own actions. You can always try affecting the behaviour of those around you, but you don't have to feel bad if your homies are being asses (especially with a population of your magnitude)
re-cbg
Where are you @cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ?
I mean located.
cbg @AnttiHaapala
@AndrasDeak Thanks. My reaction to such news is apologetic in general, I suppose it's a habit :p
@ReblochonMasque Doing my MS at the University of Southern California. But right now, in India for the hols :)
12:40
ok, cool, Dehli?
No, I'm from Bangalore.
Do you speak Canada ;)
Canada spelled with a K, and yes!
rbrb'ing for a bit, will be back soon :)
Umm... shouldn't that be "kewl" ?
12:42
no, that's kool like in koolaid
The only thing I can write in Canada language is ಠ_ಠ
That explains why he's so apologetic
FWIW, Bhargav Rao also speaks Kannada.
@AnttiHaapala If you squint - that slightly looks like one road runner chasing another on a road...
(that or I've overdosed on coffee again...)
12:49
Beepbeep
I sound English? I need to show this to my wife :-D
(I am Dutch but am married to a Scot)
@MartijnPieters I bet the lass sounds a wee bit English as well, aye? :p
@Andras and he's still alive - it's impressive - we now know why such ninja skills are required :)
Every night is black widow night?
I've yet to listen to him speak
I recommend the video where some random user asks him what he thinks of SO Chat and the Python Room - turns out he's fairly complimentary of it :p (ignore the fact he chuckles before saying anything - I took that as a good chuckle :p)
12:53
I tried to find a picture of a Dutch-style windmill, with the sails replaced by a shuriken. Surprisingly, I had no luck, but maybe I'm not using the right search terms…
@PM2Ring are you prefixing all your search requests with "debbie does" again? :p
laurel
@PM2Ring is it the 1st there yet?
@JonClements Almost. Less than a minute to go.
@PM2Ring have a good 2018 matey :)
13:00
Happy New Year from the UTC+11 timezone!
9
(cos everyone loves ABBA, right? :p)
ABBA were (are) very popular in Australia.
@JonClements sorry happy new year overdose :D
@PM2Ring happy new year, time traveler!
In Vietnam, the Happy New Year and its covers in Vietnamese, they start playing right after Christmas, and continue non-stop over Western New Year and Tết Nguyên Đán....
so mostly ~2 months...
13:14
I think you might enjoy this, Jon. Warren Haynes & Jake Shimabukuro performing the beautiful Allman Brothers song, Melissa
this is a Christian gospel cover lol.
13:34
@PM2Ring I'll have a look in a bit :)
Nice pictrue
14:07
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Being a north Indian and currently living in Southern India, I could relate this. :D (though I think I am not of that type, but may be it is just me thinking so :P )
15:05
0
Q: Learn Python The Hard Way Ex40

Minh TruongI'm learning python from the book called "Learn python the hard way" and i came across this block of code in exercise40 cities = {'CA': 'San Francisco', 'MI': 'Detroit', 'FL': 'Jacksonville'} cities['NY'] = 'New York' cities['OR'] = 'Portland' def find_city(themap, state): if state in them...

Yeah... saw your answer - you couldn't resist could you :)
I could, but I decided to answer anyway :D
did you mean 2017 or 2018 there?
Anyway - I haven't bothered to read all of lpthw - got put off fairly immediately... and that example - omg
15:27
WTY
15:41
3 hours ago, by Antti Haapala
The only thing I can write in Canada language is ಠ_ಠ
Hey, no need to be vulgar ;)
@MoinuddinQuadri No offence meant to you or any other ethnic groups ;) Some of our immediate neighbours can be just as obnoxious.
@MartijnPieters Your name would hint that you belong to another European country, but you have a British accent anyway?! Since you are (I am given to believe) based in the UK.
"ij" in a European name is almost certain to belong to a Dutch (Dutchman?)
see also Dijkstra
Ah, I see. noted for future reference
And of course when in doubt ;)
@AnttiHaapala I've never understood the unanimous hatred towards LPTHW, but it make sense after looking at that question. The book looks like it was written by someone who you'd peg as asking VLQ questions here.
16:04
Jan 23 '16 at 10:09, by PM 2Ring
@AnttiHaapala LPTHW should be called "Let's sabotage Python newbies `cause I love Ruby"
May 3 '16 at 16:44, by PM 2Ring
@tristan What he said. It's not just the steep learning curve, or the gaps in explanation, or poor ordering of the material. So many LPTHW students seem to pick up weird misconceptio ns about Python and about how programming works. True, that could be simply due to them being poor students, except that there's a consistency to the weirdness. I reckon I can often pick a LPTHW "victim" from the vibe of the question, the OP doesn't need to mention it by name.
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ I indeed live in the UK now, but I’ve also lived in the US and Norway. I’ve been around!
I was originally neutral towards LPTHW. I had a very brief look at it, and read some of Zak's stuff on various sites that promoted it, and while I didn't like his tone, I figured that his "drill sergeant" approach could appeal to some people, and that it must be an ok textbook, since it was so popular. Some time later I became an SO member and it slowly became apparent to me that almost all of the OPs that mentioned they were learning from LPTHW had strange questions.
16:25
Happy New Year to the Python SO community!
8
thanks, right back at you :)
cbg and happy new year.
Here is already next year.
We still have to put up with 2017 for another 7.5 hours.
As if 2018 is going to be any better
It is already better! :)
16:31
@AndrasDeak Congrats. - you passed the paying attention test that PM2 posed :)
@AndrasDeak Him too. :)
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ that 2018 will be the year of VLQ wasn't necessary - be nice :)
rbrb, have a great evening and New Year Party or whatever plans you have. :)
@Reblochon you too!
16:46
Thank you @JonClements, all that is behind me; off to bed now.
rbrb for good.
17:23
Hey, would someone mind helping me out with an imports issue?
we'll never know until you ask
Alright, so this is my folder structure:
api
├── config.py
├── __init__.py
├── main.py
├── models.py
Inside init.py I'm importing models as: from api import models. And in main.py, I'm trying to access a class defined in models.py
if you're on linux, the tree utility helps you prettyprint your folders
Edited :P
Well, when trying to execute a function in main.py, it throws an error saying the class is not defined
Shouldn't an import in init.py make it work module-wide, so to speak?
`__init__.py` see also sopython.com/wiki/…
17:30
Yeah, the name is correct in my project, just a typo
how are you "trying to access" the class in models.py from main.py?
I'm not sure if it's relevant but stackoverflow.com/questions/16981921/…
I'm trying to create an instance of that class
Like: team = Team()
Yeah, there's no magic involved here. If you don't import a name somehow, it won't be available
how you can import it is another matter, and with that I can't help much, but others probably can
Alright, I'll take a look at that link you provided. Thanks! :)
as I understand __init__.py only tells what to happen when you import api from elsewhere
17:39
Well, yeah. That works, I tried explicitly importing the class and it worked!
Damn it, I feel dumb for not trying this sooner
I thought I was supposed to do all my imports in __init__.py
Thanks again @AndrasDeak
17:52
@JonClements Hopefully 2018 will also be the year of me being a little more tasteful with the comments I leave :(
18:05
@RodrigoSilva no worries
it's possible that you could benefit from relative imports or something like that, but as I said I have little experience with this
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ That'd be nice - it's perfectly possible to say what you mean (and I know and understand sometimes it gets very frustrating dealing with the same dredge of things every day) without being unwelcoming or perceived as hostile
Anyhow - isn't it like early morning for you now or something?
+4.5 hours compared to you I believe
20 minutes to 12, done with new years outings, and the rest of the household has turned in.
Now, the social media wishes will begin.
@AndrasDeak Not sure, I never had to mess around with imports that much to be honest. All I did in python prior to this, was simple scripts
18:22
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ Oh that's a good point - always good to see the embarrassing pictures friends post of their NY Eve shenannigans... :)
So I'm writing a function that's supposed to write some data to a file. I want it to have the following properties:
1) The file can be either a file-like object or a file path
2) If an exception is thrown, the file shouldn't be created at all (or created and then deleted)
Is there a better solution than this monstrosity? https://pastebin.com/J6J1dsjf
*shakes fist at formatting in chat*
perhaps you can spice it up with a context manager?
*waves hands*
And Antti would say that file is not a builtin in python so the name is free to use ;)
what's a "file-like object" that doesn't support .close?
18:42
What do you mean? Why wouldn't it support close()?
I thought the check for path is not None before closing was to handle the "file-like object" case
Oh, no, I just don't want to close the file if it's been passed to me as a parameter. You opened it, you close it. I'm not touching it.
People still use pastebin when gists are free to use and have less noise around them?
on pastebin it deletes itself automatically after a while :)
So how does "delete the file if there was an exception" work together with "you passed me an open file descriptor which I leave alone"?
18:46
cbg, 2018!
It's a function that writes data to the file. The content of the file and the state of the file system are fair game. But I'm not going to close the file object that you may still want to use for something.
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ \o/
@AndrasDeak thanks, it seems my work has been done here :D
cbg, Happy New Year 2018! With that SO reached 875k questions with Python tag :D
18:53
and only 775k of them are blatant duplicates!
I'm sure there's some guidelines somewhere for how to create a decent pandas/numpy question... just wondering though guys - should we create a wiki entry on sopy for it - looks like it'd come in handy
@JonClements Look no further than the holy grail: stackoverflow.com/a/20159305/4909087
I've plastered it on the tag wiki too.
@MoinuddinQuadri 1,101,930 million questions if you count deleted ones :)
Of course, it's only for pandas, but the same thing would apply for a numpy question.
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ I thought we did and was wondering - why then you post the default mcve link rather than the pandas one as a comment then? :p
18:57
It's easier to type [mcve], than search for the link and paste it. :D But the smart thing to do would be to keep it somewhere at the ready for pasting when needed.
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ autocomment user script
also... what I'd want to do, is a JSON web service that would automatically try to find mistakes in the post and create an appropriate comment
You'll need something Naive Bayes-ish to do that.
19:15
@cᴏʟᴅsᴘᴇᴇᴅ yeap that, the item 6. with that could be nice.
@AnttiHaapala Oh, remote sources. Looks good. Has anyone already graciously made one of these jsonp comment sources available for use? Or do I have to create one myself?
19:47
Umm - what dupe are we using for Q's like stackoverflow.com/questions/48045221/… these days?
@JonClements Well, there's sopython.com/canon/39/assigning-a-list-does-not-make-a-copy but it's for lists, not dicts.
result = {'query' : {'success' : 'yes', 'teams': [i:{"test":"test"} for i in teams]}}
Am I missing something here?
like I can't figure out why this wont run
Yeah... wasn't quite sure on that one - making the leap from a mutable object and objects have multiple names to realising it applies to a dict is probably not easily traversed for someone making the mistake to start with...
@intboolstring What's [i: supposed to be? Are you trying to make a list or a dict?
@intboolstring perhaps the inner [] should be {}
19:54
@Rawing im trying to construct a list of each value of teams mapped to an empty dictionary
oh ok that worked @AnttiHaapala
and out of curiousity - what's teams?
@intboolstring that makes as much sense as intboolstring
"a list of x mapped to y" So... a dict?
but whatever :D
teams is an array of numbers
for some reason I was thinking about dictionary comprehensions incorrectly
19:57
@JonClements Agreed. How about this one? stackoverflow.com/questions/2465921/…
Looks good to me
 
2 hours later…
21:49
@intboolstring too late to say "there's no i in teams"?
 
1 hour later…
22:57
Programming this uni assignment has made me realize how annoying it is that my IDE doesn't understand my python code :/
A language that's a slightly more static python would be nice... time to go look for alternatives

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