STYLE: make rules more granular and consistent, add examples #156
185
STYLE
185
STYLE
@ -1,11 +1,26 @@
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The following guidelines are conducive to clear and readable code that is
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consistent with the style of the rest of the Bonsai Computer System.
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0. Braces are mandatory for all control flow.
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0. Use:
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- a single line for control flow statements short enough to be easily
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understood at a glance:
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1. Nested indentation should be kept to a minimum.
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if !(argc < 0) { usage(program_name); }
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2. Empty lines should be placed between different kinds of statements:
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This applies to C switch cases, as well.
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switch (value) { /* aligning stuff to make it easier to read is fine */
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case possibility: variable = foo; break;
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default: variable = NULL; break;
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}
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- as little nested logic as possible (within reason).
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- braces in control flow, when their inclusion is left optional by a
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programming language (in, for example, C).
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if (condition) { statement; }
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- empty lines between different kinds of statements:
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int t;
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@ -25,56 +40,66 @@ consistent with the style of the rest of the Bonsai Computer System.
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return io;
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3. Each block of code should be indented once more than the keyword which
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initiated the block:
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switch (c) {
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case 'e': mode |= EQUAL; break;
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case 'g': mode |= GREATER; break;
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case 'l': mode |= LESS; break;
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default: return usage(s);
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}
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4. In C, spaces should be placed in control flow statements after the keyword
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and before the opening brace:
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for (i = 2; i < argc; ++i) {
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5. If a function, a C control flow statement, or a Rust macro has arguments that
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cause the statement to be broken into multiple lines, this should be done by
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placing the arguments on a new line inside the parentheses:
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- compiler options that yield the most useful warnings, such as -Wpedantic in
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a lot of C compilers. Fix the warnings, too. See [0].
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- fixed bounds for loops; see [0].
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- one more level of indentation and one line per argument, when a function
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call or statement header is too long to fit on one line:
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let usage = format!(
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"Usage: {} [-d delimiter] index command [args...]",
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argv[0],
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);
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6. If Rust function arguments or fields are on their own lines, they should
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always have a trailing comma:
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- one more level of indentation than the keyword that initiated a block.
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if (condition) {
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statement;
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statement;
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}
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- the return value of all non-void functions, or explicitly ignore them (like
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casting to void in C):
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if ((a = malloc(sizeof char)) == NULL) { /* handle this error */
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(void)fprintf(stderr, "oh noes!"); /* explicitly ignore this one */
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return EX_OSERR; /* ...because the program is exiting anyway */
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}
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See [0].
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- the smallest possible scope for data; see [0].
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- (C) comments noting all the symbols and macros used from a header, next to
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its include macro:
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#include <unistd.h> /* close(2), getopt(3), lseek(2), read(2), write(2),
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(space-aligned) * optarg, optind, STDIN_FILENO, STDOUT_FILENO */
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- (C) one more level of indentation within switch cases.
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switch (value) {
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case possibility:
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statement;
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default:
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statement;
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}
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- (C) spaces in control flow statements, after the keyword and before the
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opening brace:
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for (i = 2; i < argc; ++i) {
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- (Cpp) as little of the preprocessor as possible; see [0].
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- (Rust) a trailing comma on all arguments or fields that are on their own
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lines:
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return Err(EvaluationError {
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message: format!("{}: Invalid token", i),
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code: EX_DATAERR,
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})
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7. If text is on the same line as a brace, spaces should be placed after an
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opening curly brace and before a closing one:
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use sysexits::{ EX_DATAERR, EX_IOERR, EX_UNAVAILABLE, EX_USAGE };
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8. If a control flow statement is short enough to be easily understood in a
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glance, it may be placed on a single line:
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if !(argc < 0) { usage(program_name); }
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9. In C, note everything you use from a library in a comment subsequent to its
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#include statement:
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#include <unistd.h> /* close(2), getopt(3), lseek(2), read(2), write(2),
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* optarg, optind, STDIN_FILENO, STDOUT_FILENO */
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10. In Rust, place extern statements after use statements that include standard
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library crates. Group alike statements:
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- (Rust) extern statements after use statements that include standard library
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crates. Group like statements:
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use std::fs::Path;
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@ -84,40 +109,74 @@ library crates. Group alike statements:
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use strerror::StrError;
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use sysexits::{ EX_OSERR, EX_USAGE };
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11. Do not use do while loops in C.
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- (Rust) if text is on the same line as a brace, spaces after an opening curly
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brace and before a closing one:
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12. Adhere to the following rules from the paper The Power of 10: Rules for
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Developing Safety-Critical Code [0]:
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1. Avoid complex flow constructs, such as goto and recursion.
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2. All loops must have fixed bounds. This prevents runaway code.
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3. Avoid heap memory allocation.
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4. Restrict functions to the length of a single printed page.
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use sysexits::{ EX_DATAERR, EX_IOERR, EX_UNAVAILABLE, EX_USAGE };
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6. Restrict the scope of data to the smallest possible.
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7. Check the return value of all non-void functions, or cast to void to
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indicate the return value is useless (such as in the case of using
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fprintf(3p) to print to the standard error).
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8. Use the preprocessor sparingly.
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9. Limit pointer use to a single dereference, and do not use function
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pointers.
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10. Compile with all possible warnings active; all warnings should then be
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addressed before release of the software (for C compilers, compile with
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-Wpedantic).
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- (Rust) one more level of indentation within match arms.
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13. Remember this quote from The Elements of Programming Style by Brian
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Kernighan:
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Everyone knows that debugging is twice as hard as writing a program in the
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first place. So if you're as clever as you can be when you write it, how
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will you ever debug it?
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1. Avoid:
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- function pointers; see [0].
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- heap memory allocation; see [0].
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- too many levels of dereferences; see [0].
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/* do not do this */
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for (size_t i = 0; i < sizeof a / sizeof *a; ++i) {
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if (a[i].id == MATCH) { a[i].val = 0; }
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}
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/* do this */
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for (struct MadeUp *s = &a[0]; *s != NULL; s = &s[1]) {
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if (s->id == MATCH) { s->val = 0; }
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}
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2. Do not use:
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- more than the length of one printed page for a function; see [0].
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- recursion, as it's complex and can unexpectedly overflow the stack; see [0]
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and section 2 of this document.
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- (C) any language features not in C99.
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- (C) do-while loops, as they're unique to the language and confusing for
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casual C programmers.
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- (C) gotos; use sensible flow control, see [0].
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- (C) pointer arithmetic, as it tends to be confusing and unnecessary; use
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index-reference patterns like &p[1] instead of p + 1. &p[n] is the address at
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p + sizeof p * n, not p + n, like pointer arithmetic suggests.
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- (C) struct bitfields in unions, to access certain bits of bigger data types,
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as it's poorly defined in the C standards; use bit arithmetic.
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- (C) trigraphs.
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- (Cpp) inclusions in C header files, to prevent multiple file inclusions.
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- (Cpp) variables to prevent multiple inclusions of the same file, such as:
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#ifdef _FILE
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#define _FILE
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/* file body */
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#endif /* ifdef _FILE */
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Instead, take the time to ensure other files aren't including the any files
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twice.
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- (libc) any functionality not in the latest POSIX or C99.
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- (libc) gets(3p) from <stdio.h>, as it's impossible to prevent buffer
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overflows when it's used; use fgets(3p) from <stdio.h>.
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- (libc) scanf(3p) from <stdio.h>; see [1].
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- (Make) any functionality not described in make(1p) from the latest POSIX.
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2. Keep the following in mind:
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- Everyone knows that debugging is twice as hard as writing a program in the
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first place. So if you're as clever as you can be when you write it, how will
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you ever debug it?
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-- Brian Kernighan, in The Elements of Programming Style
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References
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==========
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[0] <https://web.eecs.umich.edu/~imarkov/10rules.pdf>
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[1] <http://sekrit.de/webdocs/c/beginners-guide-away-from-scanf.html>
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--
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Copyright © 2024 Emma Tebibyte <emma@tebibyte.media>
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Copyright © 2024 DTB <trinity@trinity.moe>
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Copyright © Wikipedia contributors
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This work is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To view a copy of this license, visit
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