103

First of all, I found this: Objective C HTML escape/unescape, but it doesn't work for me.

My encoded characters (come from a RSS feed, btw) look like this: &

I searched all over the net and found related discussions, but no fix for my particular encoding, I think they are called hexadecimal characters.

5
  • 3
    This comment is six months after the original question, so it's more for those that stumble across this question looking for an answer and a solution. A very similar question came up just recently that I answered stackoverflow.com/questions/2254862/… It uses RegexKitLite and Blocks to do a search and replace of the &#...; in a string with its equivalent character.
    – johne
    Feb 16, 2010 at 5:48
  • What specifically “doesn't work”? I don't see anything in this question that isn't a duplicate of that earlier question. Mar 3, 2010 at 14:45
  • It's decimal. Hexadecimal is 8.
    – kennytm
    Mar 3, 2010 at 14:46
  • The difference between decimal and hexadecimal being that decimal is base-10, whereas hexadecimal is base-16. “38” is a different number in each base; in base 10, it's 3×10 + 8×1 = thirty-eight, whereas in base-16, it's 3×16 + 8×1 = fifty-six. Higher digits are (multiples of) higher powers of the base; the lowest whole digit is base0 (= 1), the next higher digit is base1 (= base), the next one is base**2 (= base * base), etc. This is exponentation at work. Mar 3, 2010 at 17:34

13 Answers 13

164

Check out my NSString category for HTML. Here are the methods available:

- (NSString *)stringByConvertingHTMLToPlainText;
- (NSString *)stringByDecodingHTMLEntities;
- (NSString *)stringByEncodingHTMLEntities;
- (NSString *)stringWithNewLinesAsBRs;
- (NSString *)stringByRemovingNewLinesAndWhitespace;
14
  • 3
    Dude, excellent functions. Your stringByDecodingXMLEntities method made my day! Thanks! Jun 8, 2010 at 6:41
  • 3
    No problem ;) Glad you found it useful! Jun 8, 2010 at 9:06
  • 4
    After a few hours searching I know that this is the only way to do it that really works. NSString is overdue for a string method that can do this. Well done. Jan 12, 2011 at 5:57
  • 1
    I found (2) on Michael's license too restrictive for my use case, so I used Nikita's solution. Including three Apache-2.0-licensed files from google toolbox works great for me.
    – jaime
    Nov 8, 2011 at 20:37
  • 10
    Code update for ARC would be handy.. Xcode is throwing ton of ARC errors and warnings on build
    – Matej
    Jul 26, 2012 at 22:46
53

The one by Daniel is basically very nice, and I fixed a few issues there:

  1. removed the skipping character for NSSCanner (otherwise spaces between two continuous entities would be ignored

    [scanner setCharactersToBeSkipped:nil];

  2. fixed the parsing when there are isolated '&' symbols (I am not sure what is the 'correct' output for this, I just compared it against firefox):

e.g.

    &#ABC DF & B'  & C' Items (288)

here is the modified code:

- (NSString *)stringByDecodingXMLEntities {
    NSUInteger myLength = [self length];
    NSUInteger ampIndex = [self rangeOfString:@"&" options:NSLiteralSearch].location;

    // Short-circuit if there are no ampersands.
    if (ampIndex == NSNotFound) {
        return self;
    }
    // Make result string with some extra capacity.
    NSMutableString *result = [NSMutableString stringWithCapacity:(myLength * 1.25)];

    // First iteration doesn't need to scan to & since we did that already, but for code simplicity's sake we'll do it again with the scanner.
    NSScanner *scanner = [NSScanner scannerWithString:self];

    [scanner setCharactersToBeSkipped:nil];

    NSCharacterSet *boundaryCharacterSet = [NSCharacterSet characterSetWithCharactersInString:@" \t\n\r;"];

    do {
        // Scan up to the next entity or the end of the string.
        NSString *nonEntityString;
        if ([scanner scanUpToString:@"&" intoString:&nonEntityString]) {
            [result appendString:nonEntityString];
        }
        if ([scanner isAtEnd]) {
            goto finish;
        }
        // Scan either a HTML or numeric character entity reference.
        if ([scanner scanString:@"&" intoString:NULL])
            [result appendString:@"&"];
        else if ([scanner scanString:@"'" intoString:NULL])
            [result appendString:@"'"];
        else if ([scanner scanString:@""" intoString:NULL])
            [result appendString:@"\""];
        else if ([scanner scanString:@"<" intoString:NULL])
            [result appendString:@"<"];
        else if ([scanner scanString:@"&gt;" intoString:NULL])
            [result appendString:@">"];
        else if ([scanner scanString:@"&#" intoString:NULL]) {
            BOOL gotNumber;
            unsigned charCode;
            NSString *xForHex = @"";

            // Is it hex or decimal?
            if ([scanner scanString:@"x" intoString:&xForHex]) {
                gotNumber = [scanner scanHexInt:&charCode];
            }
            else {
                gotNumber = [scanner scanInt:(int*)&charCode];
            }

            if (gotNumber) {
                [result appendFormat:@"%C", (unichar)charCode];

                [scanner scanString:@";" intoString:NULL];
            }
            else {
                NSString *unknownEntity = @"";

                [scanner scanUpToCharactersFromSet:boundaryCharacterSet intoString:&unknownEntity];


                [result appendFormat:@"&#%@%@", xForHex, unknownEntity];

                //[scanner scanUpToString:@";" intoString:&unknownEntity];
                //[result appendFormat:@"&#%@%@;", xForHex, unknownEntity];
                NSLog(@"Expected numeric character entity but got &#%@%@;", xForHex, unknownEntity);

            }

        }
        else {
            NSString *amp;

            [scanner scanString:@"&" intoString:&amp];  //an isolated & symbol
            [result appendString:amp];

            /*
            NSString *unknownEntity = @"";
            [scanner scanUpToString:@";" intoString:&unknownEntity];
            NSString *semicolon = @"";
            [scanner scanString:@";" intoString:&semicolon];
            [result appendFormat:@"%@%@", unknownEntity, semicolon];
            NSLog(@"Unsupported XML character entity %@%@", unknownEntity, semicolon);
             */
        }

    }
    while (![scanner isAtEnd]);

finish:
    return result;
}
5
  • This should be the definite answer to the question!! Thanks!
    – boliva
    Nov 25, 2010 at 15:24
  • This worked great. Unfortunately the highest rated answer's code doesn't work anymore due to ARC issues, but this does.
    – Ted Kulp
    Aug 3, 2012 at 13:06
  • @TedKulp it works just fine, you just need to disable ARC per file. stackoverflow.com/questions/6646052/…
    – Kyle
    Feb 4, 2013 at 13:56
  • I would thumbs you up twice if I could.
    – Kibitz503
    Mar 21, 2013 at 18:42
  • Swift translation for people still visiting this question in 2016+ : stackoverflow.com/a/35303635/1153630 Feb 9, 2016 at 22:42
49

As of iOS 7, you can decode HTML characters natively by using an NSAttributedString with the NSHTMLTextDocumentType attribute:

NSString *htmlString = @"&#63743; &amp; &#38; &lt; &gt; &trade; &copy; &hearts; &clubs; &spades; &diams;";
NSData *stringData = [htmlString dataUsingEncoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding];

NSDictionary *options = @{NSDocumentTypeDocumentAttribute:NSHTMLTextDocumentType};
NSAttributedString *decodedString;
decodedString = [[NSAttributedString alloc] initWithData:stringData
                                                 options:options
                                      documentAttributes:NULL
                                                   error:NULL];

The decoded attributed string will now be displayed as:  & & < > ™ © ♥ ♣ ♠ ♦.

Note: This will only work if called on the main thread.

8
  • 7
    best answer if you don't need to support iOS 6 and older May 22, 2014 at 10:59
  • 1
    no, not the best if someone wants to encode it on bg thread ;O
    – badeleux
    Oct 20, 2014 at 8:11
  • 4
    This worked for decoding an entity, but it also messed up a non-encoded dash.
    – Andrew
    Dec 9, 2014 at 21:31
  • This is forced to happen on the main thread. So you probably don't want to do this if you don't have to. Jan 7, 2015 at 4:02
  • It just hangs the GUI when it's matter of UITableView. Hence, not working correctly.
    – Asif Bilal
    Apr 1, 2015 at 16:05
46

Those are called Character Entity References. When they take the form of &#<number>; they are called numeric entity references. Basically, it's a string representation of the byte that should be substituted. In the case of &#038;, it represents the character with the value of 38 in the ISO-8859-1 character encoding scheme, which is &.

The reason the ampersand has to be encoded in RSS is it's a reserved special character.

What you need to do is parse the string and replace the entities with a byte matching the value between &# and ;. I don't know of any great ways to do this in objective C, but this stack overflow question might be of some help.

Edit: Since answering this some two years ago there are some great solutions; see @Michael Waterfall's answer below.

5
  • 2
    +1 I was just about to submit the exact same answer (including the same links, no less!)
    – e.James
    Jul 9, 2009 at 17:17
  • “Basically, it's a string representation of the byte that should be substituted.” More like character. This is text, not data; upon converting the text to data, the character may occupy multiple bytes, depending on the character and the encoding. Jul 9, 2009 at 18:17
  • Thanks for the reply. You said "it represents the character with the value of 38 in the ISO-8859-1 character encoding scheme, which is &". Are you sure about that? Do you have a link to a character table of this type? Because from what I recall that was a single quote.
    – treznik
    Jul 11, 2009 at 19:59
  • en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO/IEC_8859-1#ISO-8859-1 or just type &#038; into google. Jul 12, 2009 at 11:39
  • and what about &amp; or &copy; symbols?
    – vokilam
    Apr 23, 2013 at 7:57
35

Nobody seems to mention one of the simplest options: Google Toolbox for Mac
(Despite the name, this works on iOS too.)

https://github.com/google/google-toolbox-for-mac/blob/master/Foundation/GTMNSString%2BHTML.h

/// Get a string where internal characters that are escaped for HTML are unescaped 
//
///  For example, '&amp;' becomes '&'
///  Handles &#32; and &#x32; cases as well
///
//  Returns:
//    Autoreleased NSString
//
- (NSString *)gtm_stringByUnescapingFromHTML;

And I had to include only three files in the project: header, implementation and GTMDefines.h.

7
  • I have included this three scripts, but how can I use it now? Aug 26, 2011 at 6:29
  • @borut-t [myString gtm_stringByUnescapingFromHTML] Aug 26, 2011 at 6:59
  • 2
    I chose to only include those three files, so I needed to do this to make it compatible with arc: code.google.com/p/google-toolbox-for-mac/wiki/ARC_Compatibility
    – jaime
    Nov 8, 2011 at 20:34
  • i have to say this is the simplest and most lightweight solution by far
    – lensovet
    Jan 17, 2013 at 13:04
  • I wish I could get this to work completely. It seems to skip over many of them in my strings. Dec 29, 2013 at 23:58
18

I ought to post this on GitHub or something. This goes in a category of NSString, uses NSScanner for the implementation, and handles both hex and decimal numeric character entities as well as the usual symbolic ones.

Also, it handles malformed strings (when you have an & followed by an invalid sequence of characters) relatively gracefully, which turned out to be crucial in my released app that uses this code.

- (NSString *)stringByDecodingXMLEntities {
    NSUInteger myLength = [self length];
    NSUInteger ampIndex = [self rangeOfString:@"&" options:NSLiteralSearch].location;

    // Short-circuit if there are no ampersands.
    if (ampIndex == NSNotFound) {
        return self;
    }
    // Make result string with some extra capacity.
    NSMutableString *result = [NSMutableString stringWithCapacity:(myLength * 1.25)];

    // First iteration doesn't need to scan to & since we did that already, but for code simplicity's sake we'll do it again with the scanner.
    NSScanner *scanner = [NSScanner scannerWithString:self];
    do {
        // Scan up to the next entity or the end of the string.
        NSString *nonEntityString;
        if ([scanner scanUpToString:@"&" intoString:&nonEntityString]) {
            [result appendString:nonEntityString];
        }
        if ([scanner isAtEnd]) {
            goto finish;
        }
        // Scan either a HTML or numeric character entity reference.
        if ([scanner scanString:@"&amp;" intoString:NULL])
            [result appendString:@"&"];
        else if ([scanner scanString:@"&apos;" intoString:NULL])
            [result appendString:@"'"];
        else if ([scanner scanString:@"&quot;" intoString:NULL])
            [result appendString:@"\""];
        else if ([scanner scanString:@"&lt;" intoString:NULL])
            [result appendString:@"<"];
        else if ([scanner scanString:@"&gt;" intoString:NULL])
            [result appendString:@">"];
        else if ([scanner scanString:@"&#" intoString:NULL]) {
            BOOL gotNumber;
            unsigned charCode;
            NSString *xForHex = @"";

            // Is it hex or decimal?
            if ([scanner scanString:@"x" intoString:&xForHex]) {
                gotNumber = [scanner scanHexInt:&charCode];
            }
            else {
                gotNumber = [scanner scanInt:(int*)&charCode];
            }
            if (gotNumber) {
                [result appendFormat:@"%C", charCode];
            }
            else {
                NSString *unknownEntity = @"";
                [scanner scanUpToString:@";" intoString:&unknownEntity];
                [result appendFormat:@"&#%@%@;", xForHex, unknownEntity];
                NSLog(@"Expected numeric character entity but got &#%@%@;", xForHex, unknownEntity);
            }
            [scanner scanString:@";" intoString:NULL];
        }
        else {
            NSString *unknownEntity = @"";
            [scanner scanUpToString:@";" intoString:&unknownEntity];
            NSString *semicolon = @"";
            [scanner scanString:@";" intoString:&semicolon];
            [result appendFormat:@"%@%@", unknownEntity, semicolon];
            NSLog(@"Unsupported XML character entity %@%@", unknownEntity, semicolon);
        }
    }
    while (![scanner isAtEnd]);

finish:
    return result;
}
3
  • Very useful piece of code, however it does have a couple of issues that were addressed by Walty. Thanks for sharing! May 11, 2010 at 16:56
  • do you know a way to show lambda, mu, nu, pi symbols by decoding their XML entities like &micro; ... ect ????
    – chinthakad
    Apr 15, 2012 at 8:22
  • You should avoid using gotos as its terrible code style. You should replace the line goto finish; with break;.
    – Stunner
    Jan 30, 2016 at 1:11
4

This is the way I do it using RegexKitLite framework:

-(NSString*) decodeHtmlUnicodeCharacters: (NSString*) html {
NSString* result = [html copy];
NSArray* matches = [result arrayOfCaptureComponentsMatchedByRegex: @"\\&#([\\d]+);"];

if (![matches count]) 
    return result;

for (int i=0; i<[matches count]; i++) {
    NSArray* array = [matches objectAtIndex: i];
    NSString* charCode = [array objectAtIndex: 1];
    int code = [charCode intValue];
    NSString* character = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%C", code];
    result = [result stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString: [array objectAtIndex: 0]
                                               withString: character];      
}   
return result;  

}

Hope this will help someone.

0
4

you can use just this function to solve this problem.

+ (NSString*) decodeHtmlUnicodeCharactersToString:(NSString*)str
{
    NSMutableString* string = [[NSMutableString alloc] initWithString:str];  // #&39; replace with '
    NSString* unicodeStr = nil;
    NSString* replaceStr = nil;
    int counter = -1;

    for(int i = 0; i < [string length]; ++i)
    {
        unichar char1 = [string characterAtIndex:i];    
        for (int k = i + 1; k < [string length] - 1; ++k)
        {
            unichar char2 = [string characterAtIndex:k];    

            if (char1 == '&'  && char2 == '#' ) 
            {   
                ++counter;
                unicodeStr = [string substringWithRange:NSMakeRange(i + 2 , 2)];    
                // read integer value i.e, 39
                replaceStr = [string substringWithRange:NSMakeRange (i, 5)];     //     #&39;
                [string replaceCharactersInRange: [string rangeOfString:replaceStr] withString:[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%c",[unicodeStr intValue]]];
                break;
            }
        }
    }
    [string autorelease];

    if (counter > 1)
        return  [self decodeHtmlUnicodeCharactersToString:string]; 
    else
        return string;
}
3

Here's a Swift version of Walty Yeung's answer:

extension String {
    static private let mappings = ["&quot;" : "\"","&amp;" : "&", "&lt;" : "<", "&gt;" : ">","&nbsp;" : " ","&iexcl;" : "¡","&cent;" : "¢","&pound;" : " £","&curren;" : "¤","&yen;" : "¥","&brvbar;" : "¦","&sect;" : "§","&uml;" : "¨","&copy;" : "©","&ordf;" : " ª","&laquo" : "«","&not" : "¬","&reg" : "®","&macr" : "¯","&deg" : "°","&plusmn" : "±","&sup2; " : "²","&sup3" : "³","&acute" : "´","&micro" : "µ","&para" : "¶","&middot" : "·","&cedil" : "¸","&sup1" : "¹","&ordm" : "º","&raquo" : "»&","frac14" : "¼","&frac12" : "½","&frac34" : "¾","&iquest" : "¿","&times" : "×","&divide" : "÷","&ETH" : "Ð","&eth" : "ð","&THORN" : "Þ","&thorn" : "þ","&AElig" : "Æ","&aelig" : "æ","&OElig" : "Œ","&oelig" : "œ","&Aring" : "Å","&Oslash" : "Ø","&Ccedil" : "Ç","&ccedil" : "ç","&szlig" : "ß","&Ntilde;" : "Ñ","&ntilde;":"ñ",]

    func stringByDecodingXMLEntities() -> String {

        guard let _ = self.rangeOfString("&", options: [.LiteralSearch]) else {
            return self
        }

        var result = ""

        let scanner = NSScanner(string: self)
        scanner.charactersToBeSkipped = nil

        let boundaryCharacterSet = NSCharacterSet(charactersInString: " \t\n\r;")

        repeat {
            var nonEntityString: NSString? = nil

            if scanner.scanUpToString("&", intoString: &nonEntityString) {
                if let s = nonEntityString as? String {
                    result.appendContentsOf(s)
                }
            }

            if scanner.atEnd {
                break
            }

            var didBreak = false
            for (k,v) in String.mappings {
                if scanner.scanString(k, intoString: nil) {
                    result.appendContentsOf(v)
                    didBreak = true
                    break
                }
            }

            if !didBreak {

                if scanner.scanString("&#", intoString: nil) {

                    var gotNumber = false
                    var charCodeUInt: UInt32 = 0
                    var charCodeInt: Int32 = -1
                    var xForHex: NSString? = nil

                    if scanner.scanString("x", intoString: &xForHex) {
                        gotNumber = scanner.scanHexInt(&charCodeUInt)
                    }
                    else {
                        gotNumber = scanner.scanInt(&charCodeInt)
                    }

                    if gotNumber {
                        let newChar = String(format: "%C", (charCodeInt > -1) ? charCodeInt : charCodeUInt)
                        result.appendContentsOf(newChar)
                        scanner.scanString(";", intoString: nil)
                    }
                    else {
                        var unknownEntity: NSString? = nil
                        scanner.scanUpToCharactersFromSet(boundaryCharacterSet, intoString: &unknownEntity)
                        let h = xForHex ?? ""
                        let u = unknownEntity ?? ""
                        result.appendContentsOf("&#\(h)\(u)")
                    }
                }
                else {
                    scanner.scanString("&", intoString: nil)
                    result.appendContentsOf("&")
                }
            }

        } while (!scanner.atEnd)

        return result
    }
}
1

Actually the great MWFeedParser framework of Michael Waterfall (referred to his answer) has been forked by rmchaara who has update it with ARC support!

You can find it in Github here

It really works great, I used stringByDecodingHTMLEntities method and works flawlessly.

1
  • That fixes the ARC issues - but introduces some warnings. I think it's safe to ignore them? Oct 24, 2013 at 13:05
0

As if you need another solution! This one is pretty simple and quite effective:

@interface NSString (NSStringCategory)
- (NSString *) stringByReplacingISO8859Codes;
@end


@implementation NSString (NSStringCategory)
- (NSString *) stringByReplacingISO8859Codes
{
    NSString *dataString = self;
    do {
        //*** See if string contains &# prefix
        NSRange range = [dataString rangeOfString: @"&#" options: NSRegularExpressionSearch];
        if (range.location == NSNotFound) {
            break;
        }
        //*** Get the next three charaters after the prefix
        NSString *isoHex = [dataString substringWithRange: NSMakeRange(range.location + 2, 3)];
        //*** Create the full code for replacement
        NSString *isoString = [NSString stringWithFormat: @"&#%@;", isoHex];
        //*** Convert to decimal integer
        unsigned decimal = 0;
        NSScanner *scanner = [NSScanner scannerWithString: [NSString stringWithFormat: @"0%@", isoHex]];
        [scanner scanHexInt: &decimal];
        //*** Use decimal code to get unicode character
        NSString *unicode = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%C", decimal];
        //*** Replace all occurences of this code in the string
        dataString = [dataString stringByReplacingOccurrencesOfString: isoString withString: unicode];
    } while (TRUE); //*** Loop until we hit the NSNotFound

    return dataString;
}
@end
0

If you have the Character Entity Reference as a string, e.g. @"2318", you can extract a recoded NSString with the correct unicode character using strtoul;

NSString *unicodePoint = @"2318"
unichar iconChar = (unichar) strtoul(unicodePoint.UTF8String, NULL, 16);
NSString *recoded = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%C", iconChar];
NSLog(@"recoded: %@", recoded");
// prints out "recoded: ⌘"
0

Swift 3 version of Jugale's answer

extension String {
    static private let mappings = ["&quot;" : "\"","&amp;" : "&", "&lt;" : "<", "&gt;" : ">","&nbsp;" : " ","&iexcl;" : "¡","&cent;" : "¢","&pound;" : " £","&curren;" : "¤","&yen;" : "¥","&brvbar;" : "¦","&sect;" : "§","&uml;" : "¨","&copy;" : "©","&ordf;" : " ª","&laquo" : "«","&not" : "¬","&reg" : "®","&macr" : "¯","&deg" : "°","&plusmn" : "±","&sup2; " : "²","&sup3" : "³","&acute" : "´","&micro" : "µ","&para" : "¶","&middot" : "·","&cedil" : "¸","&sup1" : "¹","&ordm" : "º","&raquo" : "»&","frac14" : "¼","&frac12" : "½","&frac34" : "¾","&iquest" : "¿","&times" : "×","&divide" : "÷","&ETH" : "Ð","&eth" : "ð","&THORN" : "Þ","&thorn" : "þ","&AElig" : "Æ","&aelig" : "æ","&OElig" : "Œ","&oelig" : "œ","&Aring" : "Å","&Oslash" : "Ø","&Ccedil" : "Ç","&ccedil" : "ç","&szlig" : "ß","&Ntilde;" : "Ñ","&ntilde;":"ñ",]

    func stringByDecodingXMLEntities() -> String {

        guard let _ = self.range(of: "&", options: [.literal]) else {
            return self
        }

        var result = ""

        let scanner = Scanner(string: self)
        scanner.charactersToBeSkipped = nil

        let boundaryCharacterSet = CharacterSet(charactersIn: " \t\n\r;")

        repeat {
            var nonEntityString: NSString? = nil

            if scanner.scanUpTo("&", into: &nonEntityString) {
                if let s = nonEntityString as? String {
                    result.append(s)
                }
            }

            if scanner.isAtEnd {
                break
            }

            var didBreak = false
            for (k,v) in String.mappings {
                if scanner.scanString(k, into: nil) {
                    result.append(v)
                    didBreak = true
                    break
                }
            }

            if !didBreak {

                if scanner.scanString("&#", into: nil) {

                    var gotNumber = false
                    var charCodeUInt: UInt32 = 0
                    var charCodeInt: Int32 = -1
                    var xForHex: NSString? = nil

                    if scanner.scanString("x", into: &xForHex) {
                        gotNumber = scanner.scanHexInt32(&charCodeUInt)
                    }
                    else {
                        gotNumber = scanner.scanInt32(&charCodeInt)
                    }

                    if gotNumber {
                        let newChar = String(format: "%C", (charCodeInt > -1) ? charCodeInt : charCodeUInt)
                        result.append(newChar)
                        scanner.scanString(";", into: nil)
                    }
                    else {
                        var unknownEntity: NSString? = nil
                        scanner.scanUpToCharacters(from: boundaryCharacterSet, into: &unknownEntity)
                        let h = xForHex ?? ""
                        let u = unknownEntity ?? ""
                        result.append("&#\(h)\(u)")
                    }
                }
                else {
                    scanner.scanString("&", into: nil)
                    result.append("&")
                }
            }

        } while (!scanner.isAtEnd)

        return result
    }
}

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