1228

Android Studio 0.4.5

Android documentation for creating custom dialog boxes: http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/ui/dialogs.html

If you want a custom dialog, you can instead display an Activity as a dialog instead of using the Dialog APIs. Simply create an activity and set its theme to Theme.Holo.Dialog in the <activity> manifest element:

<activity android:theme="@android:style/Theme.Holo.Dialog" >

However, when I tried this I get the following exception:

java.lang.IllegalStateException: You need to use a Theme.AppCompat theme (or descendant) with this activity

I am supporting the following, and I can't using something greater than 10 for the min:

minSdkVersion 10
targetSdkVersion 19

In my styles I have the following:

<!-- Base application theme. -->
    <style name="AppTheme" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Light.DarkActionBar">

And in my manifest I have this for the activity:

 <application
        android:allowBackup="true"
        android:icon="@drawable/ic_launcher"
        android:label="@string/app_name"
        android:theme="@style/AppTheme" >
        <activity
            android:theme="@android:style/Theme.Holo.Light.Dialog"
            android:name="com.ssd.register.Dialog_update"
            android:label="@string/title_activity_dialog_update" >
        </activity>

Creating the dialog box like this was something I was hopping to do, as I have already completed the layout.

Can anyone tell me how I can get around this problem?

10
  • 2
    @Raghunandan, I am new to this but looking at my styles I have the following: <style name="AppTheme" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Light.DarkActionBar"> And I have the following imports: import android.support.v7.app.ActionBarActivity; import android.support.v7.app.ActionBar; import android.support.v4.app.Fragment; But not sure what all this means.
    – ant2009
    Feb 16, 2014 at 17:46
  • 14
    You are using AppCompat which is form the support library to support actionbars below api level 11. Just use android:theme="@style/AppTheme" > for the activity in manifest Feb 16, 2014 at 17:48
  • 2
    @ant2009, to claify what @Raghunandan said: in your AndroidManifest.xml, the theme you are specifying for your activity is overriding the theme you are specifying for your application. Remove the android:theme line from the <activity> tag. Feb 16, 2014 at 18:00
  • 3
    Doing this will remove the error but not get him to where he wants to be which is an activity with a dialog theme. The general rule is that if you want your activity to have an action bar it should have the AppCompat theme and the java code should extend ActionBarActivity. If you have an activity that doesn't need an action bar (like a dialog themed activity) you can apply any theme to it but the java code must extend plain old activity.
    – Bobbake4
    Feb 16, 2014 at 18:05
  • 1
    I think the only problem in this case is the context you provide for Dialog constractor. See my answer. stackoverflow.com/a/51574281/232727
    – Vitaliy A
    Jul 28, 2018 at 18:54

66 Answers 66

1225

The reason you are having this problem is because the activity you are trying to apply the dialog theme to is extending ActionBarActivity which requires the AppCompat theme to be applied.

Update: Extending AppCompatActivity would also have this problem

In this case, change the Java inheritance from ActionBarActivity to Activity and leave the dialog theme in the manifest as it is, a non Theme.AppCompat value


The general rule is that if you want your code to support older versions of Android, it should have the AppCompat theme and the java code should extend AppCompatActivity. If you have *an activity that doesn't need this support, such as you only care about the latest versions and features of Android, you can apply any theme to it but the java code must extend plain old Activity.


NOTE: When change from AppCompatActivity (or a subclass, ActionBarActivity), to Activity, must also change the various calls with "support" to the corresponding call without "support". So, instead of getSupportFragmentManager, call getFragmentManager.

24
  • 6
    op is using appcompat in which case he should extend ActionBarActivity which is what is shown from his import statements from the comment below the quesiton. Feb 16, 2014 at 17:55
  • 2
    @Bursos If you're talking about when you create a new project in Android Studio I'm guessing that's a bug in the standard config.
    – Bobbake4
    Sep 26, 2014 at 17:29
  • 2
    @Bobbake4, Im having the same problem, and this solution is impossible to work for me. The thing is that I can't extend Activity, because I have a bunch of classes (whole project) that relay on ActionBarActivity. Is there any other solution to the problem? Thx
    – 5er
    Nov 4, 2014 at 9:40
  • 6
    @5er If your Java is using ActionBarActivity the theme must extend Theme.AppCompat. There are a handful of built in themes that do extend Theme.AppCompat or you could extend it yourself and modify it. Without removing the ActionBarActivity parent you cannot get around using the Theme.AppCompat.
    – Bobbake4
    Nov 5, 2014 at 15:20
  • 38
    In style <style name="AppTheme" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Light.DarkActionBar"> this solved my issue. :) Dec 1, 2014 at 12:44
659

All you need to do is add android:theme="@style/Theme.AppCompat.Light" to your application tag in the AndroidManifest.xml file.

8
  • 2
    In the code, ant2009 has AppTheme set as the application them which extends from a descendant of Theme.AppCompat. That should work. I had the same problem after upgrading to 5.0 on my device and ended up setting @style/Theme.AppCompat.Light as the theme on my activity. Something not right here... Nov 18, 2014 at 0:21
  • 41
    This is not a valid answer for Android Studio, though it in some cases it will work as a quick fix when one is bypassing styles.xml files. In Android Studio, proper way to define theme is to define them in styles.xml files, and then the Android menifest file will merely refer to them, and select them based on which Android version you are running on your device. Usually it is set to android:theme="@style/AppTheme" and this AppTheme refers to <style name="Theme.AppTheme" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Light"> in styles.xml
    – zeeshan
    Jan 30, 2015 at 22:43
  • 6
    This didn't really work for me because my title bars disappeared when I used anything but holo...
    – AndyD273
    May 12, 2015 at 16:19
  • 1
    Ran into this issue as well using the SnackBar. This solved my issue.
    – worked
    Sep 23, 2015 at 1:26
  • 2
    @Martin if you are like me, you have forget to add the same style name in general file styles.xml than you put in (V21) styles.xml file (without the properties specific to V21). If you declare a style in V21 folder and your device have a version below. It can't find it so an exception is fired.
    – letroll
    Apr 18, 2016 at 8:59
318

Copying answer from @MarkKeen in the comments above as I had the same problem.

I had the error stated at the top of the post and happened after I added an alert dialog. I have all the relevant style information in the manifest. My problem was cured by changing a context reference in the alert builder - I changed:

new android.support.v7.app.AlertDialog.Builder(getApplicationContext())

to:

new android.support.v7.app.AlertDialog.Builder(this)

And no more problems.

14
  • 5
    It happened with me also. I was just trying and your answer really worked! What is the logic for it to get worked? I really didn't understood.
    – kirtan403
    Nov 26, 2015 at 23:12
  • 7
    Or, if you are building your AlertDialog in a fragment, rather than directly in an Activity, use getActivity() rather than this as suggested above and the problem is fixed. As for why, I can only surmise the older AlertDialog.Builder(xxx) code either wanted a different type passed in, or was simply less picky about what got passed in, while the current Builder() really, really wants an Activity. Since Google has chosen to hide (remove?) the documentation for the old code, presumably in an effort to encourage use of the v7.app version, I know of no way to tell for sure.
    – Anne Gunn
    May 24, 2016 at 21:34
  • Did the opposite of what is suggested. And it worked :P. Thanks!
    – Harisewak
    Sep 10, 2016 at 11:25
  • 1
    This solve the program for me, also you would use getContext() instead of this if you're inside an ArrayAdapter or similar adapter class.
    – Ibrahim.H
    Nov 8, 2017 at 14:22
  • 2
    This is the genuine solution i ever meet. TIP: Please mention the difference in getApplicationContext() and this in this purpose.
    – prazeev
    May 20, 2019 at 19:32
155

If you are using the application context, like this:

final AlertDialog.Builder builder = new AlertDialog.Builder(getApplicationContext());

change it to an activity context like this:

final AlertDialog.Builder builder = new AlertDialog.Builder(MainActivity.this);
5
  • Same if you're using LayoutInflater.from(<aplication context>), make sure you use the activity context or the provided LayoutInflater so that it inherits the right Theme.
    – lbarbosa
    Jan 29, 2017 at 18:02
  • 1
    Your solution helped me in my case. Can you explain what difference between getApplicationContext() and MainActivity.this? Apr 19, 2017 at 14:07
  • refer to this link: stackoverflow.com/questions/22966601/…
    – Darush
    Apr 19, 2017 at 20:28
  • 15
    you need an activity, not a context, to display dialogs
    – behelit
    Nov 1, 2017 at 23:56
  • 9
    Then why on earth does AlertDialog.Builder() require a Context? Jun 17, 2020 at 1:22
131

min sdk is 10. ActionBar is available from api level 11. So for 10 you would be using AppCompat from the support library for which you need to use Theme.AppCompat or descendant of the same.

Use

android:theme="@style/Theme.AppCompat" >

Or if you dont want action bar at the top

android:theme="@style/Theme.AppCompat.NoActionBar">

More info @

http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/ui/actionbar.html

Edit:

I might have misread op post.

Seems op wants a Dialog with a Activity Theme. So as already suggested by Bobbake4 extend Activity instead of ActionBarActivity.

Also have a look @ Dialog Attributes in the link below

http://grepcode.com/file/repository.grepcode.com/java/ext/com.google.android/android/4.4_r1/frameworks/base/core/res/res/values/themes.xml/

7
  • Thanks for the suggestion. I did try that already actually. And I got the same problem. My styles file looks like this: <style name="AppTheme" parent="Theme.AppCompat">
    – ant2009
    Feb 16, 2014 at 17:52
  • @ant2009 you won't. Use a theme from the support library AppCompat for your activity Feb 16, 2014 at 17:53
  • I not sure if I am adding this theme correct. But do you mean adding the following import statement? import android.support.v7.appcompat.*; However, I did try that and maybe I am wrong as I still ended up with the same exception.
    – ant2009
    Feb 16, 2014 at 18:05
  • @ant2009 you can have a custom dialog. But do you want to full screen dialog? Feb 16, 2014 at 18:06
  • I didn't want to have it full screen. Just a dialog box. However, the problem is solved now. Bobbake4 got it right. Thanks for you effort anyway, you have given useful advice. However, I am still confused with all this support library and AppCompat.
    – ant2009
    Feb 16, 2014 at 18:10
59

I was experiencing this problem even though my Theme was an AppCompat Theme and my Activity was an AppCompatActivity (or Activity, as suggested on other's answers). So I cleaned, rebuild and rerun the project.

(Build -> Clean Project ; Build -> Rebuild Project ; Run -> Run)

It may seem dumb, but now it works great!

Just hope it helps!

3
  • 1
    Had exact same message after adding DialogFragment to the AppCompat activity. File, Invalidate Caches / Restart fixed that in a pinch.
    – halxinate
    May 13, 2016 at 7:18
  • 3
    I tried almost all answers in this thread. but only this seemingly "dumb" answer works. thank you!
    – Dika
    Oct 8, 2019 at 16:13
  • 2
    When in doubt, assume Android Studio has silently corrupted your entire codebase and try rebuilding. This worked for me. Dear God, my hatred for Android knows no limit.
    – rmirabelle
    Dec 29, 2020 at 21:34
33

This is what fixed it for me: instead of specifying the theme in manifest, I defined it in onCreate for each activity that extends ActionBarActivity:

@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
    setTheme(R.style.MyAppTheme);
    super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
    setContentView(R.layout.my_activity_layout);
...
}

Here MyAppTheme is a descendant of Theme.AppCompat, and is defined in xml. Note that the theme must be set before super.onCreate and setContentView.

2
  • 1
    Robolectric is throwing a NullPointerException at the setTheme line when trying to load the resource. Any idea why?
    – Rhys Davis
    Feb 26, 2015 at 20:34
  • @RhysDavis Difficult to say without stack trace, but perhaps it wants setContentView first? In that case this fix will not work for you.
    – k29
    Feb 26, 2015 at 21:36
27

go to your styles and put the parent

parent="Theme.AppCompat"

instead of

parent="@android:style/Theme.Holo.Light"
3
  • Why can we do this with a standard activity. Did Android not put action bars on Standard Activities with ICS or Honecomb? Do we always have to use ActionBarActivity if we set our minimum target to SDK ICS?
    – Andrew S
    Nov 9, 2016 at 6:25
  • how to see which theme we should use with the type or feature we are using because when we import we have all types of themes available
    – blackHawk
    May 13, 2017 at 14:39
  • Thanks. This answer helped me. :) Jun 8, 2020 at 16:50
21

Change the theme of the desired Activity. This works for me:

<activity
            android:name="HomeActivity"
            android:screenOrientation="landscape"
            android:theme="@style/Theme.AppCompat.Light"
            android:windowSoftInputMode="stateHidden" />
0
19

In my case i have no values-v21 file in my res directory. Then i created it and added in it following codes:

  <style name="AppTheme" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Light.NoActionBar">
    <!-- Customize your theme here. -->
    <item name="colorPrimary">@color/colorPrimary</item>
    <item name="colorPrimaryDark">@color/colorPrimaryDark</item>
    <item name="colorAccent">@color/colorAccent</item>
</style>
1
  • I was running my project on Oreo+ devices and only this worked for me. Jun 28, 2018 at 22:44
19

for me a solution, after trying all solutions from here, was to change

    <activity
        android:name="com.github.cythara.MainActivity"
        android:label="Main">
    </activity>

to include a theme:

    <activity
        android:name="com.github.cythara.MainActivity"
        android:theme="@style/Theme.AppCompat.NoActionBar"
        android:label="Main">
    </activity>
2
  • @style/Theme.AppCompat.Light works too if you want to keep the action bar.
    – CamHart
    May 10, 2021 at 19:28
  • See stackoverflow.com/a/35556478/3622415 and this is matter of how to use "Theme.AppCompat theme (or descendant)" In my case, adding google android material implementation("com.google.android.material:material:1.9.0") solved problem. And Theme.Material3.DayNight was one of their theme - probably a descendent of Theme.AppCompat
    – kangkyu
    Sep 23, 2023 at 8:19
18

Just Do

new AlertDialog.Builder(this)

Instead of

new AlertDialog.Builder(getApplicationContext())
2
  • Working solution! 30 minutes to find out with this answer. Why I´m using new AlertDialog.Builder(getApplicationContext())? Jul 28, 2018 at 16:38
  • It will be helpful to explain what type is this expected to be.
    – Blago
    Feb 12, 2019 at 11:38
16

I had such crash on Samsung devices even though the activity did use Theme.AppCompat. The root cause was related to weird optimizations on Samsung side:

- if one activity of your app has theme not inherited from Theme.AppCompat
- and it has also `android:launchMode="singleTask"`
- then all the activities that are launched from it will share the same Theme

My solution was just removing android:launchMode="singleTask"

3
  • 2
    Just ran into this as well, I have not validated the fix and cannot reproduce the error.. but I am seeing this error in the wild on samsung devices only. most seem to be rooted as well, fwiw
    – danb
    Jun 13, 2015 at 15:37
  • I had the error stated at top of post and happened after I added an alert dialog. I have all the relevant style information in the manifest. My problem was cured by changing a context reference in the alert builder - I changed: new android.support.v7.app.AlertDialog.Builder(getApplicationContext()) to: new android.support.v7.app.AlertDialog.Builder(this) and no more problems...
    – Mark
    Aug 17, 2015 at 20:29
  • Do you have any more details or links to samsung about this optimisation? Do all activities then have to implement Theme.AppCompat or there can be activities with no theme?
    – AAverin
    Apr 21, 2020 at 11:36
14

If you need to extend ActionBarActivity you need on your style.xml:

<!-- Base application theme. -->
<style name="AppTheme" parent="AppTheme.Base"/>

<style name="AppTheme.Base" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Light.DarkActionBar">
    <!-- Customize your theme here. -->

If you set as main theme of your application as android:Theme.Material.Light instead of AppTheme.Base then you’ll get an “IllegalStateException:You need to use a Theme.AppCompat theme (or descendant) with this activity” error.

14

I had the same problem, but it solved when i put this on manifest: android:theme="@style/Theme.AppCompat.

    <application
        android:allowBackup="true"
        android:icon="@drawable/icon"
        android:label="@string/app_name_test"
        android:supportsRtl="true"
        android:theme="@style/Theme.AppCompat">

        ...    

    </application>
1
  • This is the right answer when updating from Activity to AppCompatActivity.
    – baskren
    Aug 30, 2023 at 9:56
11

In my case such issue was appear when i tried to show Dialog. The problem was in context, I've use getBaseContext() which theoretically should return Activity context, but appears its not, or it return context before any Theme applied.

So I just replaced getBaseContexts() with "this", and now it work as expected.

        Dialog.showAlert(this, title, message,....);
1
  • i was passing getApplicaitonContext(),but yours did the trick
    – Jeeva
    Apr 15, 2019 at 7:57
10

You have came to this because you want to apply Material Design in your theme style in previous sdk versions to 21. ActionBarActivity requires AppThemeso if you also want to prevent your own customization about your AppTheme, only you have to change in your styles.xml (previous to sdk 21) so this way, can inherit for an App Compat theme.

<style name="AppTheme" parent="android:Theme.Holo.Light.DarkActionBar">

for this:

<style name="AppTheme" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Light.DarkActionBar">
1
  • 6
    Did that. Still have the problem. So there is more to it.
    – Martin
    Dec 26, 2014 at 8:07
10

I had an activity with theme <android:theme="@android:style/Theme.Dialog"> used for showing dialog in my appWidget and i had same problem

i solved this error by changing activity code like below:

@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
    setTheme(R.style.Theme_AppCompat_Dialog); //this line i added
    super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
    setContentView(R.layout.activity_dialog);
}
1
  • 2
    This was a straightforward answer that worked for me without all the complexity and non-answer of the accepted one.
    – Cory Trese
    Dec 17, 2018 at 15:55
10

In case the AndroidX SplashScreen library brought you here ...

This is because Theme.SplashScreen also has no R.styleable.AppCompatTheme_windowActionBar:

if (!a.hasValue(R.styleable.AppCompatTheme_windowActionBar)) {
    a.recycle();
    throw new IllegalStateException(
            "You need to use a Theme.AppCompat theme (or descendant) with this activity.");
}

This requires switching the theme to the postSplashScreenTheme, before calling super():

@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {

    /* When switching the theme to dark mode. */
    if (savedInstanceState != null) {
        this.setTheme(R.style.AppTheme);
    }
    super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
    
    /* When starting the Activity. */
    if (savedInstanceState == null) {
        SplashScreen.installSplashScreen(this);
    }
}

Then the Theme.SplashScreen from AndroidManifest.xml won't interfere.


Also quite related: When using Theme.MaterialComponents, there's a bridge theme contained, which works as substitute for Theme.AppCompat: Theme.MaterialComponents.DayNight.NoActionBar.Bridge.

This Bridge theme works despite Theme.MaterialComponents not inherits from Theme.AppCompat:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<resources>    
    <style name="AppTheme" parent="Theme.MaterialComponents.DayNight.NoActionBar.Bridge" />   
    <style name="AppTheme.SplashScreen" parent="Theme.SplashScreen" />    
</resources>
3
  • 1
    In Kotlin SplashScreen.installSplashScreen(this) changes to installSplashScreen() as it is an extension function Jan 18, 2022 at 8:24
  • 1
    Call installSplashScreen in the starting activity before calling super.onCreate(). developer.android.com/guide/topics/ui/splash-screen/migrate
    – Joao
    Aug 18, 2022 at 13:35
  • For those who see this answer now, the reason that the "bridge themes" from material components (incl. Theme.MaterialComponents.DayNight.NoActionBar.Bridge) work is that they extend Theme.AppCompat indirectly (through several intermediate themes).
    – Javad
    Sep 20, 2023 at 13:29
9

Make sure you are using an activity context while creating a new Alert Dialog and not an application or base context.

8

for me was solution to use ContextThemeWrapper:

private FloatingActionButton getFAB() {
Context context = new android.support.v7.view.ContextThemeWrapper(getContext(), R.style.AppTheme);
FloatingActionButton fab = new FloatingActionButton(context);
return fab;}

from Android - How to create FAB programmatically?

8

I had this problem as well and what I did to fix it, AND still use the Holo theme was to take these steps:

first I replaced this import:

import android.support.v7.app.AppCompatActivity;

with this one:

import android.app.Activity;

then changed my extension from:

public class MyClass extends AppCompatActivity {//...

to this:

public class MyClass extends Activity {//...

And also had to change this import:

import android.support.v7.app.AlertDialog;

to this import:

import android.app.AlertDialog;

and then you can use your theme tag in the manifest at the activity level:

android:theme="@android:style/Theme.Holo.Dialog" />

and lastly, (unless you have other classes in your project that has to use v7 appCompat) you can either clean and rebuild your project or delete this entry in the gradle build file at the app level:

compile 'com.android.support:appcompat-v7:23.2.1'

if you have other classes in your project that has to use v7 appCompat then just clean and rebuild the project.

0
7

This one worked for me:

<application
           android:allowBackup="true"
           android:icon="@mipmap/ic_launcher"
           android:label="@string/app_name"
           android:theme="@style/AppTheme" >
           <activity
               android:name=".MainActivity"
               android:label="@string/app_name"
               android:theme="@style/Theme.AppCompat.NoActionBar">

               <intent-filter>
                   <action android:name="android.intent.action.MAIN" />

                   <category android:name="android.intent.category.LAUNCHER" />
               </intent-filter>
           </activity>
</application>
0
7

You have many solutions to that error.

  1. You should use Activity or FragmentActivity instead of ActionbarActivity or AppCompatActivity

  2. If you want use ActionbarActivity or AppCompatActivity, you should change in styles.xml Theme.Holo.xxxx to Theme.AppCompat.Light (if necessary add to DarkActionbar)

If you don't need advanced attributes about action bar or AppCompat you don't need to use Actionbar or AppCompat.

7

In Android manifest just change theme of activity to AppTheme as follow code snippet

<activity
  android:name=".MainActivity"
  android:label="@string/app_name"
  android:theme="@style/AppTheme">
</activity>
1
  • <activity android:name=".MainActivity" android:label="@string/app_name" android:theme="@style/AppTheme"> </activity>
    – shikha
    Feb 9, 2016 at 6:10
7

In my experiences the problem was the context where I showed my dialog. Inside a button click I instantiate an AlertDialog in this way:

builder = new AlertDialog.Builder(getApplicationContext());

But the context was not correct and caused the error. I've changed it using the application context in this way:

In declare section:

Context mContext;

in the onCreate method

mContext = this;

And finally in the code where I need the AlertDialog:

start_stop = (Button) findViewById(R.id.start_stop);
start_stop.setOnClickListener( new View.OnClickListener()
     {
                @Override
                public void onClick(View v)
                {
                    if (!is_running)
                    {
                        builder = new AlertDialog.Builder(mContext);
                        builder.setMessage("MYTEXT")
                                .setCancelable(false)
                                .setPositiveButton("SI", new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() {
                                    public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int id) {
                                    Task_Started = false;
                                    startTask();
                                    }
                                })
                                .setNegativeButton("NO",
                                        new DialogInterface.OnClickListener() {
                                    public void onClick(DialogInterface dialog, int id) {
                                        dialog.cancel();
                                    }
                                });
                        AlertDialog alert = builder.create();
                        alert.show();
                    }
            }
        }

This is the solution for me.

1
  • You're correct that you shouldn't be using an Application context the way you originally had it. What you've done is use an Activity as the context instead. This is not, however, an Application context or a subclass of it. So it's not right to say you're using an Application context in a different way.
    – Hod
    Mar 12, 2018 at 22:28
7

I was getting this same problem. Because i was creating custom navigation drawer. But i forget to mention theme in my manifest like this

android:theme="@style/Theme.AppCompat.NoActionBar"

As soon i added the above the theme to my manifest it resolved the problem.

7

I have faced same problem.

If you are providing context to any class or method then provide YourActivityName.this instead of getApplicationContext().

Do this

builder = new AlertDialog.Builder(YourActivity.this);

Instead of

builder = new AlertDialog.Builder(getApplicationContext());
0
6

Change your theme style parent to

 parent="Theme.AppCompat"

This worked for me ...

0
6

Your Activity is extending ActionBarActivity which requires the AppCompat.theme to be applied. Change from ActionBarActivity to Activity or FragmentActivity, it will solve the problem.

If you use no Action bar then :

android:theme="@android:style/Theme.Light.NoTitleBar.Fullscreen" 

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