252 lines
9.1 KiB
Plaintext
252 lines
9.1 KiB
Plaintext
PEP: 378
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Title: Format Specifier for Thousands Separator
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Version: $Revision$
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Last-Modified: $Date$
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Author: Raymond Hettinger <python@rcn.com>
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Status: Accepted
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Type: Standards Track
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Content-Type: text/x-rst
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Created: 12-Mar-2009
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Python-Version: 2.7 and 3.1
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Post-History: 12-Mar-2009
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Motivation
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==========
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Provide a simple, non-locale aware way to format a number
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with a thousands separator.
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Adding thousands separators is one of the simplest ways to
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humanize a program's output, improving its professional appearance
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and readability.
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In the finance world, output with thousands separators is the norm.
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Finance users and non-professional programmers find the locale
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approach to be frustrating, arcane and non-obvious.
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The locale module presents two other challenges. First, it is
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a global setting and not suitable for multi-threaded apps that
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need to serve-up requests in multiple locales. Second, the
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name of a relevant locale (such as "de_DE") can vary from
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platform to platform or may not be defined at all. The docs
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for the locale module describe these and `many other challenges`_
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in detail.
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.. _`many other challenges`: http://www.python.org/doc/2.6.1/library/locale.html#background-details-hints-tips-and-caveats
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It is not the goal to replace the locale module, to perform
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internationalization tasks, or accommodate every possible
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convention. Such tasks are better suited to robust tools like
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`Babel`_ . Instead, the goal is to make a common, everyday
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task easier for many users.
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.. _`Babel`: http://babel.edgewall.org/
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Main Proposal (from Nick Coghlan, originally called Proposal I)
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===============================================================
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A comma will be added to the format() specifier mini-language::
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[[fill]align][sign][#][0][width][,][.precision][type]
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The ',' option indicates that commas should be included in the
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output as a thousands separator. As with locales which do not
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use a period as the decimal point, locales which use a
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different convention for digit separation will need to use the
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locale module to obtain appropriate formatting.
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The proposal works well with floats, ints, and decimals.
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It also allows easy substitution for other separators.
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For example::
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format(n, "6,d").replace(",", "_")
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This technique is completely general but it is awkward in the
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one case where the commas and periods need to be swapped::
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format(n, "6,f").replace(",", "X").replace(".", ",").replace("X", ".")
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The *width* argument means the total length including the commas
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and decimal point::
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format(1234, "08,d") --> '0001,234'
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format(1234.5, "08,.1f") --> '01,234.5'
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The ',' option is defined as shown above for types 'd', 'e',
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'f', 'g', 'E', 'G', '%', 'F' and ''. To allow future extensions, it is
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undefined for other types: binary, octal, hex, character,
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etc.
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This proposal has the virtue of being simpler than the alternative
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proposal but is much less flexible and meets the needs of fewer
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users right out of the box. It is expected that some other
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solution will arise for specifying alternative separators.
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Current Version of the Mini-Language
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====================================
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* `Python 2.6 docs`_
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.. _Python 2.6 docs: http://www.python.org/doc/2.6.1/library/string.html#formatstrings
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* PEP 3101 Advanced String Formatting
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Research into what Other Languages Do
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=====================================
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Scanning the web, I've found that thousands separators are
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usually one of COMMA, DOT, SPACE, APOSTROPHE or UNDERSCORE.
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`C-Sharp`_ provides both styles (picture formatting and type specifiers).
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The type specifier approach is locale aware. The picture formatting only
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offers a COMMA as a thousands separator::
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String.Format("{0:n}", 12400) ==> "12,400"
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String.Format("{0:0,0}", 12400) ==> "12,400"
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.. _`C-Sharp`: http://blog.stevex.net/index.php/string-formatting-in-csharp/
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`Common Lisp`_ uses a COLON before the ``~D`` decimal type specifier to
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emit a COMMA as a thousands separator. The general form of ``~D`` is
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``~mincol,padchar,commachar,commaintervalD``. The *padchar* defaults
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to SPACE. The *commachar* defaults to COMMA. The *commainterval*
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defaults to three.
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::
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(format nil "~:D" 229345007) => "229,345,007"
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.. _`Common Lisp`: http://www.cs.cmu.edu/Groups/AI/html/cltl/clm/node200.html
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* The `ADA language`_ allows UNDERSCORES in its numeric literals.
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.. _`ADA language`: http://archive.adaic.com/standards/83lrm/html/lrm-02-04.html
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Visual Basic and its brethren (like `MS Excel`_) use a completely
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different style and have ultra-flexible custom format
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specifiers like::
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"_($* #,##0_)".
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.. _`MS Excel`: http://www.brainbell.com/tutorials/ms-office/excel/Create_Custom_Number_Formats.htm
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`COBOL`_ uses picture clauses like::
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PICTURE $***,**9.99CR
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.. _`COBOL`: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cobol#Syntactic_features
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Java offers a `Decimal.Format Class`_ that uses picture patterns (one
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for positive numbers and an optional one for negatives) such as:
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``"#,##0.00;(#,##0.00)"``. It allows arbitrary groupings including
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hundreds and ten-thousands and uneven groupings. The special patten
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characters are non-localized (using a DOT for a decimal separator and
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a COMMA for a grouping separator). The user can supply an alternate
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set of symbols using the formatter's *DecimalFormatSymbols* object.
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.. _`Decimal.Format Class`: http://java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/text/DecimalFormat.html
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Alternative Proposal (from Eric Smith, originally called Proposal II)
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=====================================================================
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Make both the thousands separator and decimal separator user
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specifiable but not locale aware. For simplicity, limit the
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choices to a COMMA, DOT, SPACE, APOSTROPHE or UNDERSCORE.
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The SPACE can be either U+0020 or U+00A0.
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Whenever a separator is followed by a precision, it is a
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decimal separator and an optional separator preceding it is a
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thousands separator. When the precision is absent, a lone
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specifier means a thousands separator::
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[[fill]align][sign][#][0][width][tsep][dsep precision][type]
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Examples::
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format(1234, "8.1f") --> ' 1234.0'
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format(1234, "8,1f") --> ' 1234,0'
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format(1234, "8.,1f") --> ' 1.234,0'
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format(1234, "8 ,f") --> ' 1 234,0'
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format(1234, "8d") --> ' 1234'
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format(1234, "8,d") --> ' 1,234'
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format(1234, "8_d") --> ' 1_234'
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This proposal meets mosts needs, but it comes at the expense
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of taking a bit more effort to parse. Not every possible
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convention is covered, but at least one of the options (spaces
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or underscores) should be readable, understandable, and useful
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to folks from many diverse backgrounds.
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As shown in the examples, the *width* argument means the total
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length including the thousands separators and decimal separators.
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No change is proposed for the locale module.
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The thousands separator is defined as shown above for types
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'd', 'e', 'f', 'g', '%', 'E', 'G' and 'F'. To allow future
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extensions, it is undefined for other types: binary, octal,
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hex, character, etc.
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The drawback to this alternative proposal is the difficulty
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of mentally parsing whether a single separator is a thousands
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separator or decimal separator. Perhaps it is too arcane
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to link the decimal separator with the precision specifier.
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Commentary
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==========
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* Some commenters do not like the idea of format strings at all
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and find them to be unreadable. Suggested alternatives include
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the COBOL style PICTURE approach or a convenience function with
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keyword arguments for every possible combination.
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* Some newsgroup respondants think there is no place for any
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scripts that are not internationalized and that it is a step
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backwards to provide a simple way to hardwire a particular choice
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(thus reducing incentive to use a locale sensitive approach).
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* Another thought is that embedding some particular convention in
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individual format strings makes it hard to change that convention
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later. No workable alternative was suggested but the general idea
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is to set the convention once and have it apply everywhere (others
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commented that locale already provides a way to do this).
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* There are some precedents for grouping digits in the fractional
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part of a floating point number, but this PEP does not venture into
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that territory. Only digits to the left of the decimal point are
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grouped. This does not preclude future extensions; it just focuses
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on a single, generally useful extension to the formatting language.
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* James Knight observed that Indian/Pakistani numbering systems
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group by hundreds. Ben Finney noted that Chinese group by
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ten-thousands. Eric Smith pointed-out that these are already
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handled by the "n" specifier in the locale module (albeit only
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for integers). This PEP does not attempt to support all of those
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possibilities. It focues on a single, relatively common grouping
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convention that offers a quick way to improve readability in many
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(though not all) contexts.
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Copyright
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=========
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This document has been placed in the public domain.
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..
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Local Variables:
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mode: indented-text
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indent-tabs-mode: nil
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sentence-end-double-space: t
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fill-column: 70
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coding: utf-8
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End:
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