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    • stacksofplatesS
      stacksofplates @Obsolesce
      last edited by

      @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

      @stacksofplates said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

      @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

      @JaredBusch

      You can get it going quick if you cut everything in the exampleSite directory and paste it up one level. Then comment out line number 5 in that config file you shown.

      Then from that directory, enter hugo serve -D to test locally.

      You need to paste up two levels. It's looking for the theme folder inside of the themes directory.

      I don't use that and only have one level up. That is the site. It's way easier.

      That may work, but you're not supposed to do it that way. From their documentation: https://gohugo.io/hugo-modules/theme-components/

      The name used in the theme definition above must match a folder in /your-site/themes, e.g. /your-site/themes/my-shortcodes.

      It's also much easier to segregate this way so you can use git submodules for the themes. You should have the theme as a submodule so you can pull in updates and keep that separate from your site versioning.

      ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • ObsolesceO
        Obsolesce @stacksofplates
        last edited by Obsolesce

        @stacksofplates said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

        @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

        @stacksofplates said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

        @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

        @JaredBusch

        You can get it going quick if you cut everything in the exampleSite directory and paste it up one level. Then comment out line number 5 in that config file you shown.

        Then from that directory, enter hugo serve -D to test locally.

        You need to paste up two levels. It's looking for the theme folder inside of the themes directory.

        I don't use that and only have one level up. That is the site. It's way easier.

        That may work, but you're not supposed to do it that way. From their documentation: https://gohugo.io/hugo-modules/theme-components/

        The name used in the theme definition above must match a folder in /your-site/themes, e.g. /your-site/themes/my-shortcodes.

        It's also much easier to segregate this way so you can use git submodules for the themes. You should have the theme as a submodule so you can pull in updates and keep that separate from your site versioning.

        That's always been a big PITA for me, so I purposely don't do it that way. It was confusing as hell to figure it out in the beginning, and their documentation didn't make any sense to me as a Hugo newbie, as it's not intuitive.

        So what I did was download a theme, and use the theme itself as the base of the site. Whatever is in the exampleSite folder, I move it up one level, comment out the theme line in the config file, then generate the site from there.

        As for theme updates, all the good ones I've found and use haven't had any updates in YEARS and I seriously doubt there will be any more. So at least in my case, I was never worried about that. If there would be an update, it's small enough that it's no big deal to take care of it manually.

        It was just simply too time consuming in the beginning, and the theming crap just wouldn't work for me. So how I got it working was a big time saver and, at least in my cases, there were absolutely no benefits to the theming junk.

        If I ever find a decent theme that is kept updated, I'll think about doing it that way, but until then, I see no benefit. I get the site to exactly how I want it to be, keep it in GIT and push changes as needed and the site rebuilds and deploys to staging environment (public but my IPs only) automatically, and then to production (public) via approval gate.

        stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • stacksofplatesS
          stacksofplates @Obsolesce
          last edited by

          @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

          @stacksofplates said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

          @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

          @stacksofplates said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

          @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

          @JaredBusch

          You can get it going quick if you cut everything in the exampleSite directory and paste it up one level. Then comment out line number 5 in that config file you shown.

          Then from that directory, enter hugo serve -D to test locally.

          You need to paste up two levels. It's looking for the theme folder inside of the themes directory.

          I don't use that and only have one level up. That is the site. It's way easier.

          That may work, but you're not supposed to do it that way. From their documentation: https://gohugo.io/hugo-modules/theme-components/

          The name used in the theme definition above must match a folder in /your-site/themes, e.g. /your-site/themes/my-shortcodes.

          It's also much easier to segregate this way so you can use git submodules for the themes. You should have the theme as a submodule so you can pull in updates and keep that separate from your site versioning.

          That's always been a big PITA for me, so I purposely don't do it that way. It was confusing as hell to figure it out in the beginning, and their documentation didn't make any sense to me as a Hugo newbie, as it's not intuitive.

          So what I did was download a theme, and use the theme itself as the base of the site. Whatever is in the exampleSite folder, I move it up one level, comment out the theme line in the config file, then generate the site from there.

          As for theme updates, all the good ones I've found and use haven't had any updates in YEARS and I seriously doubt there will be any more. So at least in my case, I was never worried about that. If there would be an update, it's small enough that it's no big deal to take care of it manually.

          It was just simply too time consuming in the beginning, and the theming crap just wouldn't work for me. So how I got it working was a big time saver and, at least in my cases, there were absolutely no benefits to the theming junk.

          If I ever find a decent theme that is kept updated, I'll think about doing it that way, but until then, I see no benefit. I get the site to exactly how I want it to be, keep it in GIT and push changes as needed and the site rebuilds and deploys to staging environment (public but my IPs only) automatically, and then to production (public) via approval gate.

          Yeah that's more convoluted than following how they want you to do it.

          Also about the theme updates.

          As for theme updates, all the good ones I've found and use haven't had any updates in YEARS and I seriously doubt there will be any more.

          That's 100% false. I know you're using meghna and it's had 22 commits this year the newest being 11 hours ago. Idk what you're looking at but it's not what you think.

          Hugo is always evolving. I promise you if you don't keep your theme updated your site will break. Speaking from experience using it for a few years now.

          ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • ObsolesceO
            Obsolesce @stacksofplates
            last edited by

            @stacksofplates said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

            That's 100% false. I know you're using meghna and it's had 22 commits this year the newest being 11 hours ago. Idk what you're looking at but it's not what you think.

            That's old, I don't use that anymore even though it's still running.

            stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • stacksofplatesS
              stacksofplates
              last edited by stacksofplates

              How they want you to do it works like this:

              1. mkdir -p mysite/themes
              2. git clone theme into themes
              3. cp -R themes/theme/examplesite/* .

              #3 is obv assuming you're in the site directory. You're done. Now just edit your config.

              You can also do hugo new site and it gives you a directory structure but if you're using the themes example folder it's not really needed.

              ObsolesceO JaredBuschJ 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • stacksofplatesS
                stacksofplates @Obsolesce
                last edited by

                @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                @stacksofplates said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                That's 100% false. I know you're using meghna and it's had 22 commits this year the newest being 11 hours ago. Idk what you're looking at but it's not what you think.

                That's old, I don't use that anymore even though it's still running.

                The Hugo themes list is default sorted by last updated. I had to scroll down 151 themes before I found one that wasn't updated in 2020 and the next was December 30 or 31. The themes are constantly updated.

                Sure you can find one that someone let die, but you can do that with anything.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • ObsolesceO
                  Obsolesce
                  last edited by

                  Oh man i was looking at the wrong shit. There are active updates to it, like you said.

                  I'll give that a go, then, as now it looks beneficial. But looking at it, it seems as if updates to the theme will break things.

                  I'm not convinced of the theme update process. If I have modified files in a higher directory, the updates won't apply? How does that work?

                  stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • stacksofplatesS
                    stacksofplates @Obsolesce
                    last edited by

                    @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                    Oh man i was looking at the wrong shit. There are active updates to it, like you said.

                    I'll give that a go, then, as now it looks beneficial. But looking at it, it seems as if updates to the theme will break things.

                    I'm not convinced of the theme update process. If I have modified files in a higher directory, the updates won't apply? How does that work?

                    No you would have to change those since they are custom.

                    There only way to not update the themes is to never update Hugo. Theyveade templating changes in the past and the themes have to follow that.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • ObsolesceO
                      Obsolesce @stacksofplates
                      last edited by

                      @stacksofplates said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                      How they want you to do it works like this:

                      1. mkdir -p mysite/themes
                      2. git clone theme into themes
                      3. cp -R themes/theme/examplesite/* .

                      #3 is obv assuming you're in the site directory. You're done. Now just edit your config.

                      You can also do hugo new site and it gives you a directory structure but if you're using the themes example folder it's not really needed.

                      Yes, that worked. Thanks! Up and running "proprly" now.

                      Could you explain how the theme updates work then? So whenever there's a theme update to, for example, config.toml, my site isn't going to use the new one since it's copied above, same with other files... Do I have to manually updated this stuff after finding out somehow there was an update?

                      stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • stacksofplatesS
                        stacksofplates @Obsolesce
                        last edited by

                        @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                        @stacksofplates said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                        How they want you to do it works like this:

                        1. mkdir -p mysite/themes
                        2. git clone theme into themes
                        3. cp -R themes/theme/examplesite/* .

                        #3 is obv assuming you're in the site directory. You're done. Now just edit your config.

                        You can also do hugo new site and it gives you a directory structure but if you're using the themes example folder it's not really needed.

                        Yes, that worked. Thanks! Up and running "proprly" now.

                        Could you explain how the theme updates work then? So whenever there's a theme update to, for example, config.toml, my site isn't going to use the new one since it's copied above, same with other files... Do I have to manually updated this stuff after finding out somehow there was an update?

                        No the override fills always override. It's just any Hugo specific changed would need to be added.

                        ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • ObsolesceO
                          Obsolesce @stacksofplates
                          last edited by

                          @stacksofplates said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                          @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                          @stacksofplates said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                          How they want you to do it works like this:

                          1. mkdir -p mysite/themes
                          2. git clone theme into themes
                          3. cp -R themes/theme/examplesite/* .

                          #3 is obv assuming you're in the site directory. You're done. Now just edit your config.

                          You can also do hugo new site and it gives you a directory structure but if you're using the themes example folder it's not really needed.

                          Yes, that worked. Thanks! Up and running "proprly" now.

                          Could you explain how the theme updates work then? So whenever there's a theme update to, for example, config.toml, my site isn't going to use the new one since it's copied above, same with other files... Do I have to manually updated this stuff after finding out somehow there was an update?

                          No the override fills always override. It's just any Hugo specific changed would need to be added.

                          I see. Still better than not at all. So I'll take it.

                          Anyways, need to make the changes to other sites. Luckily it's all simply laid out and only takes a minute.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • stacksofplatesS
                            stacksofplates
                            last edited by

                            I haven't had a theme that broke from something like the config.toml or a css change. It's more things like this: https://gohugo.io/news/0.57.2-relnotes/

                            So I think if I remember right that .Pages gave you everything if you were on the home page. They changed that to only immediate children and .Site.Pages now gives you everything.

                            I had that break a theme. But updating the theme fixed it and I didn't have to touch any of my override files.

                            So it's really only if you are extensively modifying the theme at those kind of levels. And you'd see it break if you are using the dev server when you do your local work.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • ObsolesceO
                              Obsolesce
                              last edited by

                              I'm having trouble with overriding css. Maybe I'm doing it wrong.

                              I know I read somewhere on creating a customcss file, but I've been through so many themes I have no idea if that's in general or theme specific.

                              What I tried that doesn't work is creating a new structure top level -- assets\css\style.css

                              stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • stacksofplatesS
                                stacksofplates @Obsolesce
                                last edited by stacksofplates

                                @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                                I'm having trouble with overriding css. Maybe I'm doing it wrong.

                                I know I read somewhere on creating a customcss file, but I've been through so many themes I have no idea if that's in general or theme specific.

                                What I tried that doesn't work is creating a new structure top level -- assets\css\style.css

                                So that depends on the theme. Some give you a custom.css file to use some don't.

                                Meghna for example gives you a declaration in your config.toml on where your custom CSS file exists.

                                If you want to hard code it, don't worry about adding the variable for the config.toml copy the theme's head.html file (or header.html depending on the theme) up to the site level layouts/partials/head.html and paste this in:

                                <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ "css/custom.css" | absURL }}">
                                

                                If you want to make it a variable so that you can define the file in the config.toml then add this:

                                    {{ "<!-- Custom CSS -->" | safeHTML }}⏎                                                                                                                                                                                                   
                                    {{ range .Site.Params.custom_css }}⏎                                                                                                                                                                                                      
                                    <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ . | absURL }}">⏎                                                                                                                                                                                          
                                    {{ end }}
                                

                                Now in your config.toml you can have a param for the CSS file like so:

                                [params]
                                custom_css = ["css/custom.css"]
                                

                                Just looking at this it looks like a good bit of work but it's really not. The site has to know where the CSS lives and with something like Drupal it would be more work making a sub-theme to add your CSS changes and such.

                                ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • stacksofplatesS
                                  stacksofplates @JaredBusch
                                  last edited by

                                  @JaredBusch said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                                  So what about this theme for a blog?
                                  https://themes.gohugo.io//theme/hugo-tikva/post/

                                  As for this question. I spun up a test with it. I had to delete the HTML in the one file because they weirdly just added a <div> and Hugo doesn't support that. The colors aren't my favorite, but that's easily changed. Other than that it looks fine. Here's a sample:

                                  jaredsblog.png

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • stacksofplatesS
                                    stacksofplates
                                    last edited by stacksofplates

                                    They've given you a lot of customization options directly in the config.toml file. This looks a lot better IMO. It's clean and fills the page:

                                    jaredsblog2.png

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • ObsolesceO
                                      Obsolesce @stacksofplates
                                      last edited by

                                      @stacksofplates said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                                      @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                                      I'm having trouble with overriding css. Maybe I'm doing it wrong.

                                      I know I read somewhere on creating a customcss file, but I've been through so many themes I have no idea if that's in general or theme specific.

                                      What I tried that doesn't work is creating a new structure top level -- assets\css\style.css

                                      So that depends on the theme. Some give you a custom.css file to use some don't.

                                      Meghna for example gives you a declaration in your config.toml on where your custom CSS file exists.

                                      If you want to hard code it, don't worry about adding the variable for the config.toml copy the theme's head.html file (or header.html depending on the theme) up to the site level layouts/partials/head.html and paste this in:

                                      <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ "css/custom.css" | absURL }}">
                                      

                                      If you want to make it a variable so that you can define the file in the config.toml then add this:

                                          {{ "<!-- Custom CSS -->" | safeHTML }}⏎                                                                                                                                                                                                   
                                          {{ range .Site.Params.custom_css }}⏎                                                                                                                                                                                                      
                                          <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ . | absURL }}">⏎                                                                                                                                                                                          
                                          {{ end }}
                                      

                                      Now in your config.toml you can have a param for the CSS file like so:

                                      [params]
                                      custom_css = ["css/custom.css"]
                                      

                                      Just looking at this it looks like a good bit of work but it's really not. The site has to know where the CSS lives and with something like Drupal it would be more work making a sub-theme to add your CSS changes and such.

                                      I couldn't get that to work, so I copied the main one and pasted a custom one below it like this:

                                        {{ "<!-- template custom css file -->" | safeHTML }}
                                        {{ $styles := resources.Get "css/custom.css" | minify }}
                                        <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ $styles.Permalink }}" integrity="{{ $styles.Data.Integrity }}" media="screen">
                                      
                                      stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • stacksofplatesS
                                        stacksofplates @Obsolesce
                                        last edited by

                                        @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                                        @stacksofplates said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                                        @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                                        I'm having trouble with overriding css. Maybe I'm doing it wrong.

                                        I know I read somewhere on creating a customcss file, but I've been through so many themes I have no idea if that's in general or theme specific.

                                        What I tried that doesn't work is creating a new structure top level -- assets\css\style.css

                                        So that depends on the theme. Some give you a custom.css file to use some don't.

                                        Meghna for example gives you a declaration in your config.toml on where your custom CSS file exists.

                                        If you want to hard code it, don't worry about adding the variable for the config.toml copy the theme's head.html file (or header.html depending on the theme) up to the site level layouts/partials/head.html and paste this in:

                                        <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ "css/custom.css" | absURL }}">
                                        

                                        If you want to make it a variable so that you can define the file in the config.toml then add this:

                                            {{ "<!-- Custom CSS -->" | safeHTML }}⏎                                                                                                                                                                                                   
                                            {{ range .Site.Params.custom_css }}⏎                                                                                                                                                                                                      
                                            <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ . | absURL }}">⏎                                                                                                                                                                                          
                                            {{ end }}
                                        

                                        Now in your config.toml you can have a param for the CSS file like so:

                                        [params]
                                        custom_css = ["css/custom.css"]
                                        

                                        Just looking at this it looks like a good bit of work but it's really not. The site has to know where the CSS lives and with something like Drupal it would be more work making a sub-theme to add your CSS changes and such.

                                        I couldn't get that to work, so I copied the main one and pasted a custom one below it like this:

                                          {{ "<!-- template custom css file -->" | safeHTML }}
                                          {{ $styles := resources.Get "css/custom.css" | minify }}
                                          <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ $styles.Permalink }}" integrity="{{ $styles.Data.Integrity }}" media="screen">
                                        

                                        Interesting. What theme are you using?

                                        ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • ObsolesceO
                                          Obsolesce @stacksofplates
                                          last edited by Obsolesce

                                          @stacksofplates said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                                          @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                                          @stacksofplates said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                                          @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                                          I'm having trouble with overriding css. Maybe I'm doing it wrong.

                                          I know I read somewhere on creating a customcss file, but I've been through so many themes I have no idea if that's in general or theme specific.

                                          What I tried that doesn't work is creating a new structure top level -- assets\css\style.css

                                          So that depends on the theme. Some give you a custom.css file to use some don't.

                                          Meghna for example gives you a declaration in your config.toml on where your custom CSS file exists.

                                          If you want to hard code it, don't worry about adding the variable for the config.toml copy the theme's head.html file (or header.html depending on the theme) up to the site level layouts/partials/head.html and paste this in:

                                          <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ "css/custom.css" | absURL }}">
                                          

                                          If you want to make it a variable so that you can define the file in the config.toml then add this:

                                              {{ "<!-- Custom CSS -->" | safeHTML }}⏎                                                                                                                                                                                                   
                                              {{ range .Site.Params.custom_css }}⏎                                                                                                                                                                                                      
                                              <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ . | absURL }}">⏎                                                                                                                                                                                          
                                              {{ end }}
                                          

                                          Now in your config.toml you can have a param for the CSS file like so:

                                          [params]
                                          custom_css = ["css/custom.css"]
                                          

                                          Just looking at this it looks like a good bit of work but it's really not. The site has to know where the CSS lives and with something like Drupal it would be more work making a sub-theme to add your CSS changes and such.

                                          I couldn't get that to work, so I copied the main one and pasted a custom one below it like this:

                                            {{ "<!-- template custom css file -->" | safeHTML }}
                                            {{ $styles := resources.Get "css/custom.css" | minify }}
                                            <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ $styles.Permalink }}" integrity="{{ $styles.Data.Integrity }}" media="screen">
                                          

                                          Interesting. What theme are you using?

                                          timer-hugo, but with quite a bit of modifications

                                          stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • stacksofplatesS
                                            stacksofplates @Obsolesce
                                            last edited by

                                            @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                                            @stacksofplates said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                                            @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                                            @stacksofplates said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                                            @Obsolesce said in Any good getting started with Hugo resources:

                                            I'm having trouble with overriding css. Maybe I'm doing it wrong.

                                            I know I read somewhere on creating a customcss file, but I've been through so many themes I have no idea if that's in general or theme specific.

                                            What I tried that doesn't work is creating a new structure top level -- assets\css\style.css

                                            So that depends on the theme. Some give you a custom.css file to use some don't.

                                            Meghna for example gives you a declaration in your config.toml on where your custom CSS file exists.

                                            If you want to hard code it, don't worry about adding the variable for the config.toml copy the theme's head.html file (or header.html depending on the theme) up to the site level layouts/partials/head.html and paste this in:

                                            <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ "css/custom.css" | absURL }}">
                                            

                                            If you want to make it a variable so that you can define the file in the config.toml then add this:

                                                {{ "<!-- Custom CSS -->" | safeHTML }}⏎                                                                                                                                                                                                   
                                                {{ range .Site.Params.custom_css }}⏎                                                                                                                                                                                                      
                                                <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ . | absURL }}">⏎                                                                                                                                                                                          
                                                {{ end }}
                                            

                                            Now in your config.toml you can have a param for the CSS file like so:

                                            [params]
                                            custom_css = ["css/custom.css"]
                                            

                                            Just looking at this it looks like a good bit of work but it's really not. The site has to know where the CSS lives and with something like Drupal it would be more work making a sub-theme to add your CSS changes and such.

                                            I couldn't get that to work, so I copied the main one and pasted a custom one below it like this:

                                              {{ "<!-- template custom css file -->" | safeHTML }}
                                              {{ $styles := resources.Get "css/custom.css" | minify }}
                                              <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ $styles.Permalink }}" integrity="{{ $styles.Data.Integrity }}" media="screen">
                                            

                                            Interesting. What theme are you using?

                                            timer-hugo, but with quite a bit of modifications

                                            That's weird. I just copied it and pasted in mysite/layouts/partials/head.html above the hover stylesheet:

                                              {{ "<!-- custom -->" | safeHTML }}⏎                                                                                                                                                                                                         
                                              <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ "css/custom.css" | absURL }}">⏎                                                                                                                                                                             
                                              {{ "<!-- hover -->" | safeHTML }}⏎                                                                                                                                                                                                          
                                              <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ "plugins/hover/hover-min.css" | absURL }}">⏎                                                                                                                                                                
                                              {{ "<!-- template main css file -->" | safeHTML }}⏎                                                                                                                                                                                         
                                              {{ $styles := resources.Get "css/style.css" | minify}}⏎                                                                                                                                                                                     
                                              <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ $styles.Permalink }}" integrity="{{ $styles.Data.Integrity }}" media="screen">⏎                                                                                                                             
                                            </head>⏎  
                                            

                                            Then added the CSS in mysite/static/css/custom.css:

                                            .top-bar.animated-header {
                                                background-color: #ce0b0b !important;
                                            }
                                            

                                            and got this:

                                            red.png

                                            ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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