417

I am trying to use the Directory.GetFiles() method to retrieve a list of files of multiple types, such as mp3's and jpg's. I have tried both of the following with no luck:

Directory.GetFiles("C:\\path", "*.mp3|*.jpg", SearchOption.AllDirectories);
Directory.GetFiles("C:\\path", "*.mp3;*.jpg", SearchOption.AllDirectories);

Is there a way to do this in one call?

4
  • 6
    As a side note , using GetFiles search pattern for filtering the extension is not safe.For instance you have two file Test1.xls and Test2.xlsx and you want to filter out xls file using search pattern *.xls, but GetFiles return both Test1.xls and Test2.xlsx . Read Note Section for more info
    – kiran
    Dec 7, 2013 at 5:54
  • So how to prevent this?
    – Brackets
    Jul 12, 2017 at 19:09
  • 4
    @kiran How is that not safe? That looks like a feature rather than a bug. Jun 15, 2018 at 13:05
  • 1
    So how to prevent this? Use ?.xls will correctly filter xls files only and will not, for example, include xlsx files.
    – Dave
    Oct 28, 2020 at 4:55

28 Answers 28

623

For .NET 4.0 and later,

var files = Directory.EnumerateFiles("C:\\path", "*.*", SearchOption.AllDirectories)
            .Where(s => s.EndsWith(".mp3") || s.EndsWith(".jpg"));

For earlier versions of .NET,

var files = Directory.GetFiles("C:\\path", "*.*", SearchOption.AllDirectories)
            .Where(s => s.EndsWith(".mp3") || s.EndsWith(".jpg"));

edit: Please read the comments. The improvement that Paul Farry suggests, and the memory/performance issue that Christian.K points out are both very important.

13
  • 71
    Just make sure that you understand the implications though: this will return all files in a string array and then filter that by the extensions you specify. That might not be a big issue if "C:\Path" doesn't have lot of files underneath it, but may be a memory/performance issue on "C:\" or something like that. Feb 14, 2010 at 12:13
  • 28
    ... 2 years later: Nice code, but watch out with this, if you have a file that ends with .JPG it won't make it. Better add s.ToLower().Endswith...
    – Stormenet
    May 5, 2010 at 9:35
  • 117
    you could just use s.EndsWith(".mp3", StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase)
    – Paul Farry
    May 31, 2010 at 22:58
  • 132
    Note that with .NET 4.0, you can replace Directory.GetFiles with Directory.EnumerateFiles, msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd383571.aspx, which will avoid the memory issues that @Christian.K mentions. Dec 2, 2011 at 22:58
  • 10
    If you want to improve performance even further in case of many possible extensions, it's better to create a HashSet with all extensions and do Where(f => _validExtensions.Contains(Path.GetExtension(f).ToLower())). Basically Contains is much faster than performing string comparisons multiple times. Aug 21, 2016 at 18:19
68

How about this:

private static string[] GetFiles(string sourceFolder, string filters, System.IO.SearchOption searchOption)
{
   return filters.Split('|').SelectMany(filter => System.IO.Directory.GetFiles(sourceFolder, filter, searchOption)).ToArray();
}

I found it here (in the comments): http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/wz42302f.aspx

7
  • I'm guessing this avoids the potential memory pitfalls of the top rated answer? In which case, it should be rated higher!
    – Dan W
    Feb 1, 2013 at 18:48
  • 14
    @DanW The top rated answer surely puts burden on the memory but I think that shouldn't be such a problem. I liked this answer too, but it's actually (much) slower then the accepted answer. Check this SpeedTest
    – OttO
    Feb 13, 2013 at 22:37
  • 9
    It is only twice as slow if there are only two extensions. If you have a list of X extensions, then it will be X times more slow. Because here you are calling the function Directory.GetFiles several times, whereas in the other solution it is called only once. May 12, 2016 at 13:25
  • 1
    @OscarHermosilla One can use Parallel.ForEach to get them in parallel Jun 21, 2018 at 12:22
  • 1
    @FindOutIslamNow but then you're limited by IO bandwidth
    – phuclv
    Jul 31, 2019 at 9:24
41

If you have a large list of extensions to check you can use the following. I didn't want to create a lot of OR statements so i modified what lette wrote.

string supportedExtensions = "*.jpg,*.gif,*.png,*.bmp,*.jpe,*.jpeg,*.wmf,*.emf,*.xbm,*.ico,*.eps,*.tif,*.tiff,*.g01,*.g02,*.g03,*.g04,*.g05,*.g06,*.g07,*.g08";
foreach (string imageFile in Directory.GetFiles(_tempDirectory, "*.*", SearchOption.AllDirectories).Where(s => supportedExtensions.Contains(Path.GetExtension(s).ToLower())))
{
    //do work here
}
7
  • Help me with this please...When I print imageFile it's giving total path of it.How can I shrink it to just the name of the file.
    – Naresh
    May 24, 2011 at 8:03
  • 2
    System.IO.Path.GetFileName(imageFile)
    – jnoreiga
    May 25, 2011 at 17:43
  • Path.GetExtension returns '.ext', not '*.ext' (at least in 3.5+).
    – nullable
    Jan 4, 2012 at 20:43
  • 2
    FYI: You need System.Linq for .where(
    – jnoreiga
    Mar 28, 2012 at 21:20
  • 2
    There is a potential flaw. We are long past the days where extensions are required to be exactly three characters. Suppose you might encounter a file with .abc, and supportedExtensions contains .abcd. Will match, though it should not. To fix: supportedExtensions = ".jpg|.abcd|"; with .Contains(Path.GetExtension(s).ToLower() + "|"). That is, include your separator character in the test. IMPORTANT: your separator character must also be after the LAST entry in supportedExceptions. Apr 2, 2018 at 13:10
35

for

var exts = new[] { "mp3", "jpg" };

You could:

public IEnumerable<string> FilterFiles(string path, params string[] exts) {
    return
        Directory
        .EnumerateFiles(path, "*.*")
        .Where(file => exts.Any(x => file.EndsWith(x, StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase)));
}

But the real benefit of EnumerateFiles shows up when you split up the filters and merge the results:

public IEnumerable<string> FilterFiles(string path, params string[] exts) {
    return 
        exts.Select(x => "*." + x) // turn into globs
        .SelectMany(x => 
            Directory.EnumerateFiles(path, x)
            );
}

It gets a bit faster if you don't have to turn them into globs (i.e. exts = new[] {"*.mp3", "*.jpg"} already).

Performance evaluation based on the following LinqPad test (note: Perf just repeats the delegate 10000 times) https://gist.github.com/zaus/7454021

( reposted and extended from 'duplicate' since that question specifically requested no LINQ: Multiple file-extensions searchPattern for System.IO.Directory.GetFiles )

10
  • what do you mean by "i gets a bit faster if you don't have to turn them into globs"? Is it O(1) or is it O(n) (in regards to number of files, not number of extensions)? I would have guessed it's O(1) (or O(n) in regards to number of extensions) and probably somewhere in the range of a few cpu-cycles... If that's the case it's probably - performance wise - negligible Jul 22, 2014 at 12:39
  • @BatteryBackupUnit yeah with 10k reps against 2 extensions the glob vs. str difference is 3ms, so yes technically negligible (see perf results link), but not knowing how many extensions you need to filter for i figured it's worth pointing out that there is a difference; i leave it up to you to decide if "simplified usage" (i.e. .FilterFiles(path, "jpg", "gif")) is better than "explicit globs" (i.e. .FilterFiles(path, "*.jpg", "*.gif")).
    – drzaus
    Jul 23, 2014 at 15:42
  • perfect, thanks. Sorry i somehow skipped over that github link. Maybe i should adapt my screen color settings :) Jul 23, 2014 at 18:46
  • 1
    The flaw with the SelectMany solution is that it will iterate over all the files once per file extension passed in.
    – 17 of 26
    Sep 15, 2016 at 13:12
  • 1
    There's a gotcha with EnumerateFiles wherein matching 3-character extensions like *.htm will also match *.html or really anything that has .htm in it (e.g. .htmfoo). This seems to be related to old DOS 8.3 filenames. codeproject.com/Questions/152289/… See note about searchPattern here: learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/… Jan 25, 2021 at 20:58
19

I know it's old question but LINQ: (.NET40+)

var files = Directory.GetFiles("path_to_files").Where(file => Regex.IsMatch(file, @"^.+\.(wav|mp3|txt)$"));
1
  • 3
    Good idea. Consider using file.ToLower() to easily match upper-case extensions. And why not extract the extension first, so Regex doesn't have to examine entire path: Regex.IsMatch(Path.GetExtension(file).ToLower(), @"\.(wav|mp3|txt)"); Apr 2, 2018 at 13:17
16

There is also a descent solution which seems not to have any memory or performance overhead and be quite elegant:

string[] filters = new[]{"*.jpg", "*.png", "*.gif"};
string[] filePaths = filters.SelectMany(f => Directory.GetFiles(basePath, f)).ToArray();
2
  • 1
    I suppose I could edit it so that it would accept unknown unlimited number of extensions with new string variable and a Split function. But even then, how is this better than jnoreiga's solution? Is it faster? Less memory consuming?
    – Brackets
    Jul 12, 2017 at 17:33
  • 1
    There is a trade-off. This approach calls GetFiles multiple times, one per filter. Those multiple calls might be significant "performance overhead" in some situations, It does have the important advantage that each GetFiles only returns an array with the matching file paths. I would expect this to usually be a good performance result, maybe even superior performance, but that needs to be tested. If GetFiles is significantly faster than EnumerateFiles, then this may be the best approach yet. Also note that the final ".ToArray()" can be omitted when IEnumerable is useable directly. Apr 2, 2018 at 13:32
11

Another way to use Linq, but without having to return everything and filter on that in memory.

var files = Directory.GetFiles("C:\\path", "*.mp3", SearchOption.AllDirectories).Union(Directory.GetFiles("C:\\path", "*.jpg", SearchOption.AllDirectories));

It's actually 2 calls to GetFiles(), but I think it's consistent with the spirit of the question and returns them in one enumerable.

2
  • Why use Linq, then? Would it be faster than using a List and addrange?
    – ThunderGr
    Nov 1, 2013 at 13:16
  • 1
    i don't know what would be faster and don't think it's an important question. for almost any place you'd be using the code for any solution to this problem, the difference in performance would be negligible. the question should be as to what is more readable to ease the maintainability of the code in the future. i think this is a reasonable answer because it puts into one source line, which i think is part of what the question desires, the calls necessary and clearly expresses the intent of that line. list and addrange is distracting with multiple steps to accomplish the same thing.
    – Dave Rael
    Nov 1, 2013 at 17:13
10

Let

var set = new HashSet<string>(
    new[] { ".mp3", ".jpg" },
    StringComparer.OrdinalIgnoreCase); // ignore case
var dir = new DirectoryInfo(path);

Then

dir.EnumerateFiles("*.*", SearchOption.AllDirectories)
   .Where(f => set.Contains(f.Extension));

or

from file in dir.EnumerateFiles("*.*", SearchOption.AllDirectories)
from ext in set // makes sense only if it's just IEnumerable<string> or similar
where String.Equals(ext, file.Extension, StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase)
select file;
1
  • getfiles do not have the overload u posted.
    – nawfal
    Jul 27, 2012 at 13:51
7

Nope. Try the following:

List<string> _searchPatternList = new List<string>();
    ...
    List<string> fileList = new List<string>();
    foreach ( string ext in _searchPatternList )
    {
        foreach ( string subFile in Directory.GetFiles( folderName, ext  )
        {
            fileList.Add( subFile );
        }
    }

    // Sort alpabetically
    fileList.Sort();

    // Add files to the file browser control    
    foreach ( string fileName in fileList )
    {
        ...;
    }

Taken from: http://blogs.msdn.com/markda/archive/2006/04/20/580075.aspx

6

I can't use .Where method because I'm programming in .NET Framework 2.0 (Linq is only supported in .NET Framework 3.5+).

Code below is not case sensitive (so .CaB or .cab will be listed too).

string[] ext = new string[2] { "*.CAB", "*.MSU" };

foreach (string found in ext)
{
    string[] extracted = Directory.GetFiles("C:\\test", found, System.IO.SearchOption.AllDirectories);

    foreach (string file in extracted)
    {
        Console.WriteLine(file);
    }
}
0
5
List<string> FileList = new List<string>();
DirectoryInfo di = new DirectoryInfo("C:\\DirName");

IEnumerable<FileInfo> fileList = di.GetFiles("*.*");

//Create the query
IEnumerable<FileInfo> fileQuery = from file in fileList
                                  where (file.Extension.ToLower() == ".jpg" || file.Extension.ToLower() == ".png")
                                  orderby file.LastWriteTime
                                  select file;

foreach (System.IO.FileInfo fi in fileQuery)
{
    fi.Attributes = FileAttributes.Normal;
    FileList.Add(fi.FullName);
}
4
  • file.Extension.ToLower() is bad practice. Jul 27, 2012 at 14:35
  • then what we should use? @abatishchev Jun 18, 2013 at 10:56
  • @Nitin: String.Equals(a, b, StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase) Jun 18, 2013 at 17:34
  • 1
    Actually, file.Extension.Equals(".jpg",StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase) is what I prefer. It seems to be faster than .ToLower or .ToUpper, or so they say everywhere I searched. Actually, .Equals is faster than ==, as well, since == calls .Equals and checks for null(Because you cannot do null.Equals(null)).
    – ThunderGr
    Nov 1, 2013 at 13:19
5

in .NET 2.0 (no Linq):

public static List<string> GetFilez(string path, System.IO.SearchOption opt,  params string[] patterns)
{
    List<string> filez = new List<string>();
    foreach (string pattern in patterns)
    {
        filez.AddRange(
            System.IO.Directory.GetFiles(path, pattern, opt)
        );
    }


    // filez.Sort(); // Optional
    return filez; // Optional: .ToArray()
}

Then use it:

foreach (string fn in GetFilez(path
                             , System.IO.SearchOption.AllDirectories
                             , "*.xml", "*.xml.rels", "*.rels"))
{}
5
DirectoryInfo directory = new DirectoryInfo(Server.MapPath("~/Contents/"));

//Using Union

FileInfo[] files = directory.GetFiles("*.xlsx")
                            .Union(directory
                            .GetFiles("*.csv"))
                            .ToArray();
1
  • How can I look through files to get the path? Thanks
    – Si8
    Dec 16, 2020 at 20:55
5

If you are using VB.NET (or imported the dependency into your C# project), there actually exists a convenience method that allows to filter for multiple extensions:

Microsoft.VisualBasic.FileIO.FileSystem.GetFiles("C:\\path", Microsoft.VisualBasic.FileIO.SearchOption.SearchAllSubDirectories, new string[] {"*.mp3", "*.jpg"});

In VB.NET this can be accessed through the My-namespace:

My.Computer.FileSystem.GetFiles("C:\path", FileIO.SearchOption.SearchAllSubDirectories, {"*.mp3", "*.jpg"})

Unfortunately, these convenience methods don't support a lazily evaluated variant like Directory.EnumerateFiles() does.

1
  • This is easily the best answer and yet something much more hacky is the accepted one. Gotta love SO. Nov 18, 2019 at 4:09
4

The following function searches on multiple patterns, separated by commas. You can also specify an exclusion, eg: "!web.config" will search for all files and exclude "web.config". Patterns can be mixed.

private string[] FindFiles(string directory, string filters, SearchOption searchOption)
{
    if (!Directory.Exists(directory)) return new string[] { };

    var include = (from filter in filters.Split(new char[] { ',' }, StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries) where !string.IsNullOrEmpty(filter.Trim()) select filter.Trim());
    var exclude = (from filter in include where filter.Contains(@"!") select filter);

    include = include.Except(exclude);

    if (include.Count() == 0) include = new string[] { "*" };

    var rxfilters = from filter in exclude select string.Format("^{0}$", filter.Replace("!", "").Replace(".", @"\.").Replace("*", ".*").Replace("?", "."));
    Regex regex = new Regex(string.Join("|", rxfilters.ToArray()));

    List<Thread> workers = new List<Thread>();
    List<string> files = new List<string>();

    foreach (string filter in include)
    {
        Thread worker = new Thread(
            new ThreadStart(
                delegate
                {
                    string[] allfiles = Directory.GetFiles(directory, filter, searchOption);
                    if (exclude.Count() > 0)
                    {
                        lock (files)
                            files.AddRange(allfiles.Where(p => !regex.Match(p).Success));
                    }
                    else
                    {
                        lock (files)
                            files.AddRange(allfiles);
                    }
                }
            ));

        workers.Add(worker);

        worker.Start();
    }

    foreach (Thread worker in workers)
    {
        worker.Join();
    }

    return files.ToArray();

}

Usage:

foreach (string file in FindFiles(@"D:\628.2.11", @"!*.config, !*.js", SearchOption.AllDirectories))
            {
                Console.WriteLine(file);
            }
4

What about

string[] filesPNG = Directory.GetFiles(path, "*.png");
string[] filesJPG = Directory.GetFiles(path, "*.jpg");
string[] filesJPEG = Directory.GetFiles(path, "*.jpeg");

int totalArraySizeAll = filesPNG.Length + filesJPG.Length + filesJPEG.Length;
List<string> filesAll = new List<string>(totalArraySizeAll);
filesAll.AddRange(filesPNG);
filesAll.AddRange(filesJPG);
filesAll.AddRange(filesJPEG);
3

Just found an another way to do it. Still not one operation, but throwing it out to see what other people think about it.

private void getFiles(string path)
{
    foreach (string s in Array.FindAll(Directory.GetFiles(path, "*", SearchOption.AllDirectories), predicate_FileMatch))
    {
        Debug.Print(s);
    }
}

private bool predicate_FileMatch(string fileName)
{
    if (fileName.EndsWith(".mp3"))
        return true;
    if (fileName.EndsWith(".jpg"))
        return true;
    return false;
}
3

I wonder why there are so many "solutions" posted?

If my rookie-understanding on how GetFiles works is right, there are only two options and any of the solutions above can be brought down to these:

  1. GetFiles, then filter: Fast, but a memory killer due to storing overhead untill the filters are applied

  2. Filter while GetFiles: Slower the more filters are set, but low memory usage as no overhead is stored.
    This is explained in one of the above posts with an impressive benchmark: Each filter option causes a seperate GetFile-operation so the same part of the harddrive gets read several times.

In my opinion Option 1) is better, but using the SearchOption.AllDirectories on folders like C:\ would use huge amounts of memory.
Therefor i would just make a recursive sub-method that goes through all subfolders using option 1)

This should cause only 1 GetFiles-operation on each folder and therefor be fast (Option 1), but use only a small amount of memory as the filters are applied afters each subfolders' reading -> overhead is deleted after each subfolder.

Please correct me if I am wrong. I am as i said quite new to programming but want to gain deeper understanding of things to eventually become good at this :)

3

Here is a simple and elegant way of getting filtered files

var allowedFileExtensions = ".csv,.txt";


var files = Directory.EnumerateFiles(@"C:\MyFolder", "*.*", SearchOption.TopDirectoryOnly)
                .Where(s => allowedFileExtensions.IndexOf(Path.GetExtension(s)) > -1).ToArray(); 
1
  • 1
    one issue with this code: if you have .xlsx in allowedFileExtensions, it will match .xlsx but also .xls and .xl and .x
    – 537mfb
    Jul 9, 2021 at 9:47
2

Make the extensions you want one string i.e ".mp3.jpg.wma.wmf" and then check if each file contains the extension you want. This works with .net 2.0 as it does not use LINQ.

string myExtensions=".jpg.mp3";

string[] files=System.IO.Directory.GetFiles("C:\myfolder");

foreach(string file in files)
{
   if(myExtensions.ToLower().contains(System.IO.Path.GetExtension(s).ToLower()))
   {
      //this file has passed, do something with this file

   }
}

The advantage with this approach is you can add or remove extensions without editing the code i.e to add png images, just write myExtensions=".jpg.mp3.png".

1
  • it doesn't know what is s
    – Brackets
    Jul 12, 2017 at 17:22
2
/// <summary>
/// Returns the names of files in a specified directories that match the specified patterns using LINQ
/// </summary>
/// <param name="srcDirs">The directories to seach</param>
/// <param name="searchPatterns">the list of search patterns</param>
/// <param name="searchOption"></param>
/// <returns>The list of files that match the specified pattern</returns>
public static string[] GetFilesUsingLINQ(string[] srcDirs,
     string[] searchPatterns,
     SearchOption searchOption = SearchOption.AllDirectories)
{
    var r = from dir in srcDirs
            from searchPattern in searchPatterns
            from f in Directory.GetFiles(dir, searchPattern, searchOption)
            select f;

    return r.ToArray();
}
2

Nop... I believe you have to make as many calls as the file types you want.

I would create a function myself taking an array on strings with the extensions I need and then iterate on that array making all the necessary calls. That function would return a generic list of the files matching the extensions I'd sent.

Hope it helps.

2

I had the same problem and couldn't find the right solution so I wrote a function called GetFiles:

/// <summary>
/// Get all files with a specific extension
/// </summary>
/// <param name="extensionsToCompare">string list of all the extensions</param>
/// <param name="Location">string of the location</param>
/// <returns>array of all the files with the specific extensions</returns>
public string[] GetFiles(List<string> extensionsToCompare, string Location)
{
    List<string> files = new List<string>();
    foreach (string file in Directory.GetFiles(Location))
    {
        if (extensionsToCompare.Contains(file.Substring(file.IndexOf('.')+1).ToLower())) files.Add(file);
    }
    files.Sort();
    return files.ToArray();
}

This function will call Directory.Getfiles() only one time.

For example call the function like this:

string[] images = GetFiles(new List<string>{"jpg", "png", "gif"}, "imageFolder");

EDIT: To get one file with multiple extensions use this one:

/// <summary>
    /// Get the file with a specific name and extension
    /// </summary>
    /// <param name="filename">the name of the file to find</param>
    /// <param name="extensionsToCompare">string list of all the extensions</param>
    /// <param name="Location">string of the location</param>
    /// <returns>file with the requested filename</returns>
    public string GetFile( string filename, List<string> extensionsToCompare, string Location)
    {
        foreach (string file in Directory.GetFiles(Location))
        {
            if (extensionsToCompare.Contains(file.Substring(file.IndexOf('.') + 1).ToLower()) &&& file.Substring(Location.Length + 1, (file.IndexOf('.') - (Location.Length + 1))).ToLower() == filename) 
                return file;
        }
        return "";
    }

For example call the function like this:

string image = GetFile("imagename", new List<string>{"jpg", "png", "gif"}, "imageFolder");
2

Using GetFiles search pattern for filtering the extension is not safe!! For instance you have two file Test1.xls and Test2.xlsx and you want to filter out xls file using search pattern *.xls, but GetFiles return both Test1.xls and Test2.xlsx I was not aware of this and got error in production environment when some temporary files suddenly was handled as right files. Search pattern was *.txt and temp files was named *.txt20181028_100753898 So search pattern can not be trusted, you have to add extra check on filenames as well.

2
1

Or you can just convert the string of extensions to String^

vector <string>  extensions = { "*.mp4", "*.avi", "*.flv" };
for (int i = 0; i < extensions.size(); ++i)
{
     String^ ext = gcnew String(extensions[i].c_str());;
     String^ path = "C:\\Users\\Eric\\Videos";
     array<String^>^files = Directory::GetFiles(path,ext);
     Console::WriteLine(ext);
     cout << " " << (files->Length) << endl;
}
1
  • 3
    This is c++ not c#
    – Brackets
    Jul 12, 2017 at 16:35
1

i don t know what solution is better, but i use this:

String[] ext = "*.ext1|*.ext2".Split('|');

            List<String> files = new List<String>();
            foreach (String tmp in ext)
            {
                files.AddRange(Directory.GetFiles(dir, tmp, SearchOption.AllDirectories));
            }
0

you can add this to your project

public static class Collectables {
    public static List<System.IO.FileInfo> FilesViaPattern(this System.IO.DirectoryInfo fldr, string pattern) {
        var filter = pattern.Split(" ");
        return fldr.GetFiles( "*.*", System.IO.SearchOption.AllDirectories)
            .Where(l => filter.Any(k => l.Name.EndsWith(k))).ToList();
    }
}

then use it anywhere like this

new System.IO.DirectoryInfo("c:\\test").FilesViaPattern("txt doc any.extension");
0

This is the shortest and performance wise the best solution:

            foreach (var FilePath in new[] { "*.fbx", "*.obj", "*.mtl" }.SelectMany(X => Directory.EnumerateFiles(DirectoryPath, X))) DoSomething(FilePath);

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