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437 lines
14 KiB
C
437 lines
14 KiB
C
/* Output like sprintf to a buffer of specified size.
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Also takes args differently: pass one pointer to the end
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of the format string in addition to the format string itself.
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Copyright (C) 1985, 2001-2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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This file is part of GNU Emacs.
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GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
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it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
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(at your option) any later version.
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GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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GNU General Public License for more details.
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You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
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/* If you think about replacing this with some similar standard C function of
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the printf family (such as vsnprintf), please note that this function
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supports the following Emacs-specific features:
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. For %c conversions, it produces a string with the multibyte representation
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of the (`int') argument, suitable for display in an Emacs buffer.
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. For %s and %c, when field width is specified (e.g., %25s), it accounts for
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the diplay width of each character, according to char-width-table. That
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is, it does not assume that each character takes one column on display.
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. If the size of the buffer is not enough to produce the formatted string in
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its entirety, it makes sure that truncation does not chop the last
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character in the middle of its multibyte sequence, producing an invalid
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sequence.
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. It accepts a pointer to the end of the format string, so the format string
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could include embedded null characters.
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. It signals an error if the length of the formatted string is about to
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overflow MOST_POSITIVE_FIXNUM, to avoid producing strings longer than what
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Emacs can handle.
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OTOH, this function supports only a small subset of the standard C formatted
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output facilities. E.g., %u and %ll are not supported, and precision is
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ignored %s and %c conversions. (See below for the detailed documentation of
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what is supported.) However, this is okay, as this function is supposed to
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be called from `error' and similar functions, and thus does not need to
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support features beyond those in `Fformat', which is used by `error' on the
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Lisp level. */
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/* This function supports the following %-sequences in the `format'
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argument:
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%s means print a string argument.
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%S is silently treated as %s, for loose compatibility with `Fformat'.
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%d means print a `signed int' argument in decimal.
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%o means print an `unsigned int' argument in octal.
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%x means print an `unsigned int' argument in hex.
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%e means print a `double' argument in exponential notation.
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%f means print a `double' argument in decimal-point notation.
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%g means print a `double' argument in exponential notation
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or in decimal-point notation, whichever uses fewer characters.
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%c means print a `signed int' argument as a single character.
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%% means produce a literal % character.
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A %-sequence may contain optional flag, width, and precision specifiers, and
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a length modifier, as follows:
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%<flags><width><precision><length>character
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where flags is [+ -0], width is [0-9]+, precision is .[0-9]+, and length
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is empty or l or the value of the pI macro. Also, %% in a format
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stands for a single % in the output. A % that does not introduce a
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valid %-sequence causes undefined behavior.
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The + flag character inserts a + before any positive number, while a space
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inserts a space before any positive number; these flags only affect %d, %o,
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%x, %e, %f, and %g sequences. The - and 0 flags affect the width specifier,
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as described below. For signed numerical arguments only, the ` ' (space)
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flag causes the result to be prefixed with a space character if it does not
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start with a sign (+ or -).
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The l (lower-case letter ell) length modifier is a `long' data type
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modifier: it is supported for %d, %o, and %x conversions of integral
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arguments, must immediately precede the conversion specifier, and means that
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the respective argument is to be treated as `long int' or `unsigned long
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int'. Similarly, the value of the pI macro means to use EMACS_INT or
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EMACS_UINT and the empty length modifier means `int' or `unsigned int'.
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The width specifier supplies a lower limit for the length of the printed
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representation. The padding, if any, normally goes on the left, but it goes
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on the right if the - flag is present. The padding character is normally a
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space, but (for numerical arguments only) it is 0 if the 0 flag is present.
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The - flag takes precedence over the 0 flag.
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For %e, %f, and %g sequences, the number after the "." in the precision
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specifier says how many decimal places to show; if zero, the decimal point
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itself is omitted. For %s and %S, the precision specifier is ignored. */
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#include <config.h>
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#include <stdio.h>
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#include <ctype.h>
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#include <setjmp.h>
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#ifdef STDC_HEADERS
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#include <float.h>
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#endif
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#include <unistd.h>
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#include <limits.h>
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#include "lisp.h"
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/* Since we use the macro CHAR_HEAD_P, we have to include this, but
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don't have to include others because CHAR_HEAD_P does not contains
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another macro. */
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#include "character.h"
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#ifndef SIZE_MAX
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# define SIZE_MAX ((size_t) -1)
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#endif
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#ifndef DBL_MAX_10_EXP
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#define DBL_MAX_10_EXP 308 /* IEEE double */
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#endif
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/* Generate output from a format-spec FORMAT,
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terminated at position FORMAT_END.
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(*FORMAT_END is not part of the format, but must exist and be readable.)
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Output goes in BUFFER, which has room for BUFSIZE chars.
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BUFSIZE must be positive. If the output does not fit, truncate it
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to fit and return BUFSIZE - 1; if this truncates a multibyte
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sequence, store '\0' into the sequence's first byte.
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Returns the number of bytes stored into BUFFER, excluding
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the terminating null byte. Output is always null-terminated.
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String arguments are passed as C strings.
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Integers are passed as C integers. */
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size_t
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doprnt (char *buffer, register size_t bufsize, const char *format,
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const char *format_end, va_list ap)
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{
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const char *fmt = format; /* Pointer into format string */
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register char *bufptr = buffer; /* Pointer into output buffer.. */
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/* Use this for sprintf unless we need something really big. */
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char tembuf[DBL_MAX_10_EXP + 100];
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/* Size of sprintf_buffer. */
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size_t size_allocated = sizeof (tembuf);
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/* Buffer to use for sprintf. Either tembuf or same as BIG_BUFFER. */
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char *sprintf_buffer = tembuf;
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/* Buffer we have got with malloc. */
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char *big_buffer = NULL;
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register size_t tem;
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char *string;
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char fixed_buffer[20]; /* Default buffer for small formatting. */
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char *fmtcpy;
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int minlen;
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char charbuf[MAX_MULTIBYTE_LENGTH + 1]; /* Used for %c. */
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USE_SAFE_ALLOCA;
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if (format_end == 0)
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format_end = format + strlen (format);
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if ((format_end - format + 1) < sizeof (fixed_buffer))
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fmtcpy = fixed_buffer;
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else
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SAFE_ALLOCA (fmtcpy, char *, format_end - format + 1);
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bufsize--;
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/* Loop until end of format string or buffer full. */
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while (fmt < format_end && bufsize > 0)
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{
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if (*fmt == '%') /* Check for a '%' character */
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{
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size_t size_bound = 0;
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EMACS_INT width; /* Columns occupied by STRING on display. */
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int long_flag = 0;
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int pIlen = sizeof pI - 1;
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fmt++;
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/* Copy this one %-spec into fmtcpy. */
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string = fmtcpy;
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*string++ = '%';
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while (fmt < format_end)
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{
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*string++ = *fmt;
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if ('0' <= *fmt && *fmt <= '9')
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{
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/* Get an idea of how much space we might need.
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This might be a field width or a precision; e.g.
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%1.1000f and %1000.1f both might need 1000+ bytes.
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Parse the width or precision, checking for overflow. */
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size_t n = *fmt - '0';
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while (fmt + 1 < format_end
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&& '0' <= fmt[1] && fmt[1] <= '9')
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{
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/* Avoid size_t overflow. Avoid int overflow too, as
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many sprintfs mishandle widths greater than INT_MAX.
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This test is simple but slightly conservative: e.g.,
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(INT_MAX - INT_MAX % 10) is reported as an overflow
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even when it's not. */
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if (n >= min (INT_MAX, SIZE_MAX) / 10)
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error ("Format width or precision too large");
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n = n * 10 + fmt[1] - '0';
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*string++ = *++fmt;
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}
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if (size_bound < n)
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size_bound = n;
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}
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else if (! (*fmt == '-' || *fmt == ' ' || *fmt == '.'
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|| *fmt == '+'))
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break;
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fmt++;
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}
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if (0 < pIlen && pIlen <= format_end - fmt
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&& memcmp (fmt, pI, pIlen) == 0)
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{
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long_flag = 2;
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memcpy (string, fmt + 1, pIlen);
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string += pIlen;
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fmt += pIlen;
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}
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else if (fmt < format_end && *fmt == 'l')
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{
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long_flag = 1;
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*string++ = *++fmt;
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}
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*string = 0;
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/* Make the size bound large enough to handle floating point formats
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with large numbers. */
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if (size_bound > SIZE_MAX - DBL_MAX_10_EXP - 50)
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error ("Format width or precision too large");
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size_bound += DBL_MAX_10_EXP + 50;
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/* Make sure we have that much. */
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if (size_bound > size_allocated)
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{
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if (big_buffer)
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xfree (big_buffer);
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big_buffer = (char *) xmalloc (size_bound);
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sprintf_buffer = big_buffer;
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size_allocated = size_bound;
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}
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minlen = 0;
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switch (*fmt++)
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{
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default:
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error ("Invalid format operation %s", fmtcpy);
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/* case 'b': */
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case 'l':
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case 'd':
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{
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int i;
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long l;
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if (1 < long_flag)
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{
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EMACS_INT ll = va_arg (ap, EMACS_INT);
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sprintf (sprintf_buffer, fmtcpy, ll);
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}
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else if (long_flag)
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{
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l = va_arg(ap, long);
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sprintf (sprintf_buffer, fmtcpy, l);
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}
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else
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{
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i = va_arg(ap, int);
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sprintf (sprintf_buffer, fmtcpy, i);
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}
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/* Now copy into final output, truncating as necessary. */
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string = sprintf_buffer;
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goto doit;
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}
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case 'o':
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case 'x':
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{
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unsigned u;
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unsigned long ul;
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if (1 < long_flag)
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{
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EMACS_UINT ull = va_arg (ap, EMACS_UINT);
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sprintf (sprintf_buffer, fmtcpy, ull);
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}
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else if (long_flag)
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{
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ul = va_arg(ap, unsigned long);
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sprintf (sprintf_buffer, fmtcpy, ul);
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}
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else
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{
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u = va_arg(ap, unsigned);
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sprintf (sprintf_buffer, fmtcpy, u);
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}
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/* Now copy into final output, truncating as necessary. */
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string = sprintf_buffer;
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goto doit;
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}
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case 'f':
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case 'e':
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case 'g':
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{
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double d = va_arg(ap, double);
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sprintf (sprintf_buffer, fmtcpy, d);
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/* Now copy into final output, truncating as necessary. */
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string = sprintf_buffer;
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goto doit;
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}
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case 'S':
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string[-1] = 's';
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case 's':
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if (fmtcpy[1] != 's')
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minlen = atoi (&fmtcpy[1]);
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string = va_arg (ap, char *);
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tem = strlen (string);
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if (tem > MOST_POSITIVE_FIXNUM)
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error ("String for %%s or %%S format is too long");
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width = strwidth (string, tem);
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goto doit1;
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/* Copy string into final output, truncating if no room. */
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doit:
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/* Coming here means STRING contains ASCII only. */
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tem = strlen (string);
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if (tem > MOST_POSITIVE_FIXNUM)
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error ("Format width or precision too large");
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width = tem;
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doit1:
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/* We have already calculated:
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TEM -- length of STRING,
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WIDTH -- columns occupied by STRING when displayed, and
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MINLEN -- minimum columns of the output. */
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if (minlen > 0)
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{
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while (minlen > width && bufsize > 0)
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{
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*bufptr++ = ' ';
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bufsize--;
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minlen--;
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}
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minlen = 0;
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}
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if (tem > bufsize)
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{
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/* Truncate the string at character boundary. */
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tem = bufsize;
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while (!CHAR_HEAD_P (string[tem - 1])) tem--;
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/* If the multibyte sequence of this character is
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too long for the space we have left in the
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buffer, truncate before it. */
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if (tem > 0
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&& BYTES_BY_CHAR_HEAD (string[tem - 1]) > bufsize)
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tem--;
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if (tem > 0)
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memcpy (bufptr, string, tem);
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bufptr[tem] = 0;
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/* Trigger exit from the loop, but make sure we
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return to the caller a value which will indicate
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that the buffer was too small. */
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bufptr += bufsize;
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bufsize = 0;
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continue;
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}
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else
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memcpy (bufptr, string, tem);
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bufptr += tem;
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bufsize -= tem;
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if (minlen < 0)
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{
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while (minlen < - width && bufsize > 0)
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{
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*bufptr++ = ' ';
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bufsize--;
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minlen++;
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}
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minlen = 0;
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}
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continue;
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case 'c':
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{
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int chr = va_arg(ap, int);
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tem = CHAR_STRING (chr, (unsigned char *) charbuf);
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string = charbuf;
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string[tem] = 0;
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width = strwidth (string, tem);
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if (fmtcpy[1] != 'c')
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minlen = atoi (&fmtcpy[1]);
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goto doit1;
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}
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case '%':
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fmt--; /* Drop thru and this % will be treated as normal */
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}
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}
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{
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/* Just some character; Copy it if the whole multi-byte form
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fit in the buffer. */
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char *save_bufptr = bufptr;
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do { *bufptr++ = *fmt++; }
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while (fmt < format_end && --bufsize > 0 && !CHAR_HEAD_P (*fmt));
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if (!CHAR_HEAD_P (*fmt))
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{
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/* Truncate, but return value that will signal to caller
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that the buffer was too small. */
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*save_bufptr = 0;
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break;
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}
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}
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};
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/* If we had to malloc something, free it. */
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xfree (big_buffer);
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*bufptr = 0; /* Make sure our string ends with a '\0' */
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SAFE_FREE ();
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return bufptr - buffer;
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}
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