Create initial document for Angular framework coding standards. This document will evolve over time. This version contains all non-controversial rules as discussed in a recent team meeting. Some text and examples were copied from angular/components. PR Close #37700
		
			
				
	
	
		
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			255 lines
		
	
	
		
			7.5 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
# Angular Framework Coding Standards
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The coding practices in this doc apply only to development on Angular itself, not applications
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built _with_ Angular. (Though you can follow them too if you really want).
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## Code style
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The [Google JavaScript Style Guide](https://google.github.io/styleguide/jsguide.html) is the
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basis for Angular's coding style, with additional guidance here pertaining to TypeScript. The team
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uses `clang-format` to automatically format code; automatic formatting is enforced by CI.
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## Code practices
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### Write useful comments
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Comments that explain what some block of code does are nice; they can tell you something in less
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time than it would take to follow through the code itself.
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Comments that explain why some block of code exists at all, or does something the way it does,
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are _invaluable_. The "why" is difficult, or sometimes impossible, to track down without seeking out
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the original author. When collaborators are in the same room, this hurts productivity.
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When collaborators are in different timezones, this can be devastating to productivity.
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For example, this is a not-very-useful comment:
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```typescript
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// Set default tabindex.
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if (!attributes['tabindex']) {
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  element.setAttribute('tabindex', '-1');
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}
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```
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While this is much more useful:
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```typescript
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// Unless the user specifies otherwise, the calendar should not be a tab stop.
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// This prevents ngAria from overzealously adding a tabindex to anything with an ng-model.
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if (!attributes['tabindex']) {
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  element.setAttribute('tabindex', '-1');
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}
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```
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In TypeScript code, use JsDoc-style comments for descriptions (on classes, members, etc.) and
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use `//` style comments for everything else (explanations, background info, etc.).
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### API Design
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#### Boolean arguments
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Generally avoid adding boolean arguments to a method in cases where that argument means
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"do something extra". In these cases, prefer breaking the behavior up into different functions.
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```typescript
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// AVOID
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function getTargetElement(createIfNotFound = false) {
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  // ...
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}
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```
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```typescript
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// PREFER
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function getExistingTargetElement() {
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  // ...
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}
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function createTargetElement() {
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  // ...
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}
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```
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You can ignore this guidance when necessary for performance reasons in framework code.
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#### Optional arguments
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Use optional function arguments only when such an argument makes sense for an API or when required
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for performance. Don't use optional arguments merely for convenience in implementation.
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### TypeScript
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#### Typing
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Avoid `any` where possible. If you find yourself using `any`, consider whether a generic or
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`unknown` may be appropriate in your case.
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#### Getters and Setters
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Getters and setters introduce openings for side-effects, add more complexity for code readers,
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and generate additional code when targeting older browsers.
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* Only use getters and setters for `@Input` properties or when otherwise required for API
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compatibility.
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* Avoid long or complex getters and setters. If the logic of an accessor would take more than
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three lines, introduce a new method to contain the logic.
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* A getter should immediately precede its corresponding setter.
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* Decorators such as `@Input` should be applied to the getter and not the setter.
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* Always use a `readonly` property instead of a getter (with no setter) when possible.
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  ```typescript
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  /** YES */
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  readonly active: boolean;
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  /** NO */
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  get active(): boolean {
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    // Using a getter solely to make the property read-only.
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    return this._active;
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  }
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  ```
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#### Iteration
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Prefer `for` or `for of` to `Array.prototype.forEach`. The `forEach` API makes debugging harder
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and may increase overhead from unnecessary function invocations (though modern browsers do usually
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optimize this well).
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#### JsDoc comments
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All public APIs must have user-facing comments. These are extracted for API documentation and shown
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in IDEs.
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Private and internal APIs should have JsDoc when they are not obvious. Ultimately it is the purview
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of the code reviewer as to what is "obvious", but the rule of thumb is that *most* classes,
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properties, and methods should have a JsDoc description.
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Properties should have a concise description of what the property means:
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```typescript
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  /** The label position relative to the checkbox. Defaults to 'after' */
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  @Input() labelPosition: 'before' | 'after' = 'after';
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```
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Methods blocks should describe what the function does and provide a description for each parameter
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and the return value:
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```typescript
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  /**
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   * Opens a modal dialog containing the given component.
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   * @param component Type of the component to load into the dialog.
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   * @param config Dialog configuration options.
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   * @returns Reference to the newly-opened dialog.
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   */
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  open<T>(component: ComponentType<T>, config?: MatDialogConfig): MatDialogRef<T> { ... }
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```
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Boolean properties and return values should use "Whether..." as opposed to "True if...":
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```ts
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  /** Whether the button is disabled. */
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  disabled: boolean = false;
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```
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#### Try-Catch
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Only use `try-catch` blocks when dealing with legitimately unexpected errors. Don't use `try` to
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avoid checking for expected error conditions such as null dereference or out-of-bound array access.
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Each `try-catch` block **must** include a comment that explains the
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specific error being caught and why it cannot be prevented.
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##### Variable declarations
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Prefer `const` wherever possible, only using `let` when a value must change. Avoid `var` unless
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absolutely necessary.
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##### `readonly`
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Use `readonly` members wherever possible.
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#### Naming
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##### General
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* Prefer writing out words instead of using abbreviations.
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* Prefer *exact* names over short names (within reason). For example, `labelPosition` is better than
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`align` because the former much more exactly communicates what the property means.
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* Except for `@Input()` properties, use `is` and `has` prefixes for boolean properties / methods.
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##### Observables
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Don't suffix observables with `$`.
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##### Classes
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Name classes based on their responsibility. Names should capture what the code *does*,
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not how it is used:
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```typescript
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/** NO: */
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class DefaultRouteReuseStrategy { }
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/** YES: */
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class NonStoringRouteReuseStrategy { }
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```
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##### Methods
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The name of a method should capture the action performed *by* that method rather than
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describing when the method will be called. For example:
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```typescript
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/** AVOID: does not describe what the function does. */
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handleClick() {
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  // ...
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}
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/** PREFER: describes the action performed by the function. */
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activateRipple() {
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  // ...
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}
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```
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##### Test classes and examples
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Give test classes and examples meaningful, descriptive names.
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```ts
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/** PREFER: describes the scenario under test. */
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class FormGroupWithCheckboxAndRadios { /* ... */ }
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class InputWithNgModel { /* ... */ }
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/** AVOID: does not fully describe the scenario under test. */
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class Comp { /* ... */ }
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class InputComp { /* ... */ }
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```
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#### RxJS
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When importing the `of` function to create an `Observable` from a value, alias the imported
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function as `observableOf`.
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```typescript
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import {of as observableOf} from 'rxjs';
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```
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#### Testing
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##### Test names
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Use descriptive names for jasmine tests. Ideally, test names should read as a sentence, often of
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the form "it should...".
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```typescript
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/** PREFER: describes the scenario under test. */
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describe('Router', () => {
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  describe('with the default route reuse strategy', () => {
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    it('should not reuse routes upon location change', () => {
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      // ...
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    });
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  })
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});
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/** AVOID: does not fully describe the scenario under test. */
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describe('Router', () => {
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  describe('default strategy', () => {
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    it('should work', () => {
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      // ...
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    });
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  })
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});
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```
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