350

How do I encode and decode HTML entities using JavaScript or JQuery?

var varTitle = "Chris' corner";

I want it to be:

var varTitle = "Chris' corner";
5

17 Answers 17

314

I recommend against using the jQuery code that was accepted as the answer. While it does not insert the string to decode into the page, it does cause things such as scripts and HTML elements to get created. This is way more code than we need. Instead, I suggest using a safer, more optimized function.

var decodeEntities = (function() {
  // this prevents any overhead from creating the object each time
  var element = document.createElement('div');

  function decodeHTMLEntities (str) {
    if(str && typeof str === 'string') {
      // strip script/html tags
      str = str.replace(/<script[^>]*>([\S\s]*?)<\/script>/gmi, '');
      str = str.replace(/<\/?\w(?:[^"'>]|"[^"]*"|'[^']*')*>/gmi, '');
      element.innerHTML = str;
      str = element.textContent;
      element.textContent = '';
    }

    return str;
  }

  return decodeHTMLEntities;
})();

http://jsfiddle.net/LYteC/4/

To use this function, just call decodeEntities("&amp;") and it will use the same underlying techniques as the jQuery version will—but without jQuery's overhead, and after sanitizing the HTML tags in the input. See Mike Samuel's comment on the accepted answer for how to filter out HTML tags.

This function can be easily used as a jQuery plugin by adding the following line in your project.

jQuery.decodeEntities = decodeEntities;
18
  • Can someone tell me what str.replace(/<\/?\w(?:[^"'>]|"[^"]*"|'[^']*')*>/gmi, ''); does?
    – PoeHaH
    Jan 17, 2013 at 16:55
  • 9
    Note: textContent is not supported in IE8, so if that's still one of your targeted browsers, you have to find another solution. I just wasted an hour trying to figure that out, since we need to decode entities specifically to compensate for another IE8 bug. Sep 10, 2013 at 21:57
  • 7
    Careful with the line that takes out HTML tags. You shouldn't be using regex with HTML/XML. Bobince has made this clear for ages. Feb 12, 2015 at 23:42
  • 2
    While this is nice, users should be aware that it is pretty dangerous. It may appear that it properly strips "dangerous stuff" out, but it can be easily defeated. Do not use this on untrusted user input unless you like getting xss attacked.
    – goat
    Dec 6, 2017 at 23:14
  • 4
    @Qix I don't completely understand the problem here. HTML/XML should certainly not be "parsed with regexes" as people so often do. If all you're trying to do is tokenize it, then AFAIK regexes are exactly an ideal solution. Unless I'm missing something, stripping the tags completely shouldn't require anything beyond lexical analysis and thus there'd be no benefit to going beyond regexes here. May 9, 2018 at 18:40
262

You could try something like:

var Title = $('<textarea />').html("Chris&apos; corner").text();
console.log(Title);
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>

JS Fiddle.

A more interactive version:

$('form').submit(function() {
  var theString = $('#string').val();
  var varTitle = $('<textarea />').html(theString).text();
  $('#output').text(varTitle);
  return false;
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<form action="#" method="post">
  <fieldset>
    <label for="string">Enter a html-encoded string to decode</label>
    <input type="text" name="string" id="string" />
  </fieldset>
  <fieldset>
    <input type="submit" value="decode" />
  </fieldset>
</form>

<div id="output"></div>

JS Fiddle.

10
  • Cool that works. So just curious, the $('div />') is used to create a <div> element around the varTitle?
    – chris
    Apr 26, 2011 at 21:38
  • 6
    @chris and @david - This code creates an empty (detached from DOM) div and sets it's innerHTML and finally retrieved back as normal text. It's not surrounding it with a DIV, but putting it in a div. I putting some emphasis over this since it's crucial to understand how jQuery works.
    – Christian
    Apr 26, 2011 at 21:56
  • 41
    Do NOT use this with untrusted data, see Mike's comment here: stackoverflow.com/questions/1147359/… Jun 24, 2012 at 2:57
  • 5
    just chiming in. this is vulnerable to xss attacks, try them! stackoverflow.com/questions/31282274/… Jul 8, 2015 at 2:10
  • 2
    This can be vulnerable to XSS attacks for older jQuery versions (see more here). I would suggest using he library instead. You can see code examples in another answer to similar question.
    – ands
    Oct 24, 2019 at 20:30
134

Edit 2023: These days you should use a library like he.

Like Robert K said, don't use jQuery.html().text() to decode html entities as it's unsafe because user input should never have access to the DOM. Read about XSS for why this is unsafe.

Instead try the Underscore.js utility-belt library which comes with escape and unescape methods:

_.escape(string)

Escapes a string for insertion into HTML, replacing &, <, >, ", `, and ' characters.

_.escape('Curly, Larry & Moe');
=> "Curly, Larry &amp; Moe"

_.unescape(string)

The opposite of escape, replaces &amp;, &lt;, &gt;, &quot;, &#96; and &#x27; with their unescaped counterparts.

_.unescape('Curly, Larry &amp; Moe');
=> "Curly, Larry & Moe"

To support decoding more characters, just copy the Underscore unescape method and add more characters to the map.

9
  • 2
    @chovy, use the latest Underscore.js version >= 1.4.2 and you won't get a TypeError. Oct 21, 2012 at 23:01
  • 3
    I like this answer because it doesn't require a DOM, and nowadays who can guarantee access to the DOM API when writing javascript? Unfortunately it only works for the listed entities, and leaves things like &nbsp; untouched.
    – trey-jones
    Aug 20, 2014 at 14:06
  • 1
    +1 for using a source-controlled library rather than copying and pasting some random code from the top stack overflow answer. If only the javascript standard library had these kind of low-level functions. Oct 22, 2014 at 6:57
  • 5
    Keep in mind that it does not unencode encoded russian or japanese characters. e.g. &#x30cf;&#x30ed;&#x30fc;&#x30ef;&#x30fc;&#x30eb;&#x30c9; -> ハローワールド cannot be done with this
    – daghan
    Nov 11, 2014 at 12:48
  • 7
    _.unescape only works for a handful of values. So something like _.unescape('&raquo;') for example will just return "&raquo;"
    – Dylan
    Nov 23, 2015 at 17:53
112

Original author answer here.

This is my favourite way of decoding HTML characters. The advantage of using this code is that tags are also preserved.

function decodeHtml(html) {
    var txt = document.createElement("textarea");
    txt.innerHTML = html;
    return txt.value;
}

Example: http://jsfiddle.net/k65s3/

Input:

Entity:&nbsp;Bad attempt at XSS:<script>alert('new\nline?')</script><br>

Output:

Entity: Bad attempt at XSS:<script>alert('new\nline?')</script><br>
10
  • 2
    This method works every where even when jquery is not available or not loaded yet, because its pure javascript.
    – IamSalik
    Apr 3, 2018 at 7:57
  • 2
    Is there any drawback to this technique? It seems way easier than the answers above. Dec 9, 2018 at 20:00
  • 1
    @anthonygood each time the function creates a new object (DOM element) Mar 13, 2019 at 12:18
  • 7
    Next time @insign please credit the original author or give a link to it. stackoverflow.com/a/7394787
    – geauser
    May 21, 2019 at 16:27
  • 2
    @geauser yes, done
    – insign
    May 2, 2020 at 3:15
60

Here's a quick method that doesn't require creating a div, and decodes the "most common" HTML escaped chars:

function decodeHTMLEntities(text) {
    var entities = [
        ['amp', '&'],
        ['apos', '\''],
        ['#x27', '\''],
        ['#x2F', '/'],
        ['#39', '\''],
        ['#47', '/'],
        ['lt', '<'],
        ['gt', '>'],
        ['nbsp', ' '],
        ['quot', '"']
    ];

    for (var i = 0, max = entities.length; i < max; ++i)
        text = text.replace(new RegExp('&' + entities[i][0] + ';', 'g'), entities[i][1]);

    return text;
}

console.log(decodeHTMLEntities('&amp; &quot;'));

8
  • 15
    Your answer doesn't work at all for most html entities, and expanding it to include them would be pretty repetitive and error-prone. E.g., there's an entity for each Japanese kanji character, of which there are thousands. Plus by that point, I wouldn't be surprised if your answer was slower than some of the others here, since you'd be running thousands of replaces with thousands of regexes for each string to decode.
    – mmitchell
    Aug 21, 2013 at 21:54
  • 2
    It really depends on your PURPOSE when you are encoding these strings. If your goal is to have it not trigger HTML processing via things like < or > it is entirely unnecessary to encode the other characters via the character entity syntax. The extensive amount of character entities serve mostly as a convenience tool. The entities I have listed are the bare minimum of ones you must escape to avoid having the data get mixed up with HTML. [Continued in next comment] Aug 23, 2013 at 15:34
  • 1
    As for the speed thing, good point on having run multiple regexes. But of course since your idea of putting every character entity into that code is pointless and frankly, really stupid, this is not an issue. One could however generate the regex using the | character first and do a single replace() call. I think you'd have to benchmark it to see which is faster, but my gut says it'll be faster to use | with one replace() due to function call overhead being high in Javascript. Aug 23, 2013 at 15:34
  • 1
    Right, so your solution is incomplete. The OP never said why they were encoding their HTML entities so if you were making an assumption on that front, it probably should have been noted in the answer.
    – mmitchell
    Aug 23, 2013 at 16:32
  • 1
    This is complete when you're trying to replicate htmlspecialchars_decode in javascript. It does not pretend to replicate html_entity_decode. I find there's alot of noise on this topic and many bloated/insecure methods. This is the decode companion to the excellent encode solutions provided by Kip and Chris Jacob: stackoverflow.com/questions/1787322/… Jan 31, 2016 at 0:36
37

here is another version:

function convertHTMLEntity(text){
    const span = document.createElement('span');

    return text
    .replace(/&[#A-Za-z0-9]+;/gi, (entity,position,text)=> {
        span.innerHTML = entity;
        return span.innerText;
    });
}

console.log(convertHTMLEntity('Large &lt; &#163; 500'));

5
  • Since you are matching both A-Z and a-z, is the case insensitive option needed ?
    – tigrou
    Jul 16, 2019 at 14:42
  • @tigrou No, You can remove that option.
    – Mirodil
    Jul 16, 2019 at 18:06
  • this is the best version thanks !
    – Karambit
    May 7, 2021 at 18:57
  • This is the best answer. I will upvote it.
    – Piyush
    May 9, 2022 at 13:58
  • Excellent solution, but still not sure how its working. Please explain your code.
    – MosesK
    May 24, 2022 at 7:49
22

Inspired by Robert K's solution, this version does not strip HTML tags, and is just as secure.

var decode_entities = (function() {
    // Remove HTML Entities
    var element = document.createElement('div');

    function decode_HTML_entities (str) {

        if(str && typeof str === 'string') {

            // Escape HTML before decoding for HTML Entities
            str = escape(str).replace(/%26/g,'&').replace(/%23/g,'#').replace(/%3B/g,';');

            element.innerHTML = str;
            if(element.innerText){
                str = element.innerText;
                element.innerText = '';
            }else{
                // Firefox support
                str = element.textContent;
                element.textContent = '';
            }
        }
        return unescape(str);
    }
    return decode_HTML_entities;
})();
1
17

jQuery provides a way to encode and decode html entities.

If you use a "<div/>" tag, it will strip out all the html.

function htmlDecode(value) {
    return $("<div/>").html(value).text();
}

function htmlEncode(value) {
    return $('<div/>').text(value).html();
}

If you use a "<textarea/>" tag, it will preserve the html tags.

function htmlDecode(value) {
    return $("<textarea/>").html(value).text();
}

function htmlEncode(value) {
    return $('<textarea/>').text(value).html();
}
3
  • 1
    Love it, works for me, tested it in the Chrome console and indeed the <script> tags and any attributes it had are removed completely. Oct 22, 2015 at 19:12
  • 1
    I also prefer this solution. A pure JavaScript way to do it is creating a div with var div = document.createElement('div'); and then setting innerHTML and getting innerText to unescape; vice-versa for escaping.
    – bozdoz
    Aug 6, 2017 at 14:44
  • jQuery text() will strip html if it's invalid, like for ex. when using table rows. Aug 24, 2022 at 0:12
13

To add yet another "inspired by Robert K" to the list, here is another safe version which does not strip HTML tags. Instead of running the whole string through the HTML parser, it pulls out only the entities and converts those.

var decodeEntities = (function() {
    // this prevents any overhead from creating the object each time
    var element = document.createElement('div');

    // regular expression matching HTML entities
    var entity = /&(?:#x[a-f0-9]+|#[0-9]+|[a-z0-9]+);?/ig;

    return function decodeHTMLEntities(str) {
        // find and replace all the html entities
        str = str.replace(entity, function(m) {
            element.innerHTML = m;
            return element.textContent;
        });

        // reset the value
        element.textContent = '';

        return str;
    }
})();
11

Inspired by Robert K's solution, strips html tags and prevents executing scripts and eventhandlers like: <img src=fake onerror="prompt(1)"> Tested on latest Chrome, FF, IE (should work from IE9, but haven't tested).

var decodeEntities = (function () {
        //create a new html document (doesn't execute script tags in child elements)
        var doc = document.implementation.createHTMLDocument("");
        var element = doc.createElement('div');

        function getText(str) {
            element.innerHTML = str;
            str = element.textContent;
            element.textContent = '';
            return str;
        }

        function decodeHTMLEntities(str) {
            if (str && typeof str === 'string') {
                var x = getText(str);
                while (str !== x) {
                    str = x;
                    x = getText(x);
                }
                return x;
            }
        }
        return decodeHTMLEntities;
    })();

Simply call:

decodeEntities('<img src=fake onerror="prompt(1)">');
decodeEntities("<script>alert('aaa!')</script>");
0
11

Here is a full version

function htmldecode(s){
    window.HTML_ESC_MAP = {
    "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":"¿","Agrave":"À","Aacute":"Á","Acirc":"Â","Atilde":"Ã","Auml":"Ä","Aring":"Å","AElig":"Æ","Ccedil":"Ç","Egrave":"È","Eacute":"É","Ecirc":"Ê","Euml":"Ë","Igrave":"Ì","Iacute":"Í","Icirc":"Î","Iuml":"Ï","ETH":"Ð","Ntilde":"Ñ","Ograve":"Ò","Oacute":"Ó","Ocirc":"Ô","Otilde":"Õ","Ouml":"Ö","times":"×","Oslash":"Ø","Ugrave":"Ù","Uacute":"Ú","Ucirc":"Û","Uuml":"Ü","Yacute":"Ý","THORN":"Þ","szlig":"ß","agrave":"à","aacute":"á","acirc":"â","atilde":"ã","auml":"ä","aring":"å","aelig":"æ","ccedil":"ç","egrave":"è","eacute":"é","ecirc":"ê","euml":"ë","igrave":"ì","iacute":"í","icirc":"î","iuml":"ï","eth":"ð","ntilde":"ñ","ograve":"ò","oacute":"ó","ocirc":"ô","otilde":"õ","ouml":"ö","divide":"÷","oslash":"ø","ugrave":"ù","uacute":"ú","ucirc":"û","uuml":"ü","yacute":"ý","thorn":"þ","yuml":"ÿ","fnof":"ƒ","Alpha":"Α","Beta":"Β","Gamma":"Γ","Delta":"Δ","Epsilon":"Ε","Zeta":"Ζ","Eta":"Η","Theta":"Θ","Iota":"Ι","Kappa":"Κ","Lambda":"Λ","Mu":"Μ","Nu":"Ν","Xi":"Ξ","Omicron":"Ο","Pi":"Π","Rho":"Ρ","Sigma":"Σ","Tau":"Τ","Upsilon":"Υ","Phi":"Φ","Chi":"Χ","Psi":"Ψ","Omega":"Ω","alpha":"α","beta":"β","gamma":"γ","delta":"δ","epsilon":"ε","zeta":"ζ","eta":"η","theta":"θ","iota":"ι","kappa":"κ","lambda":"λ","mu":"μ","nu":"ν","xi":"ξ","omicron":"ο","pi":"π","rho":"ρ","sigmaf":"ς","sigma":"σ","tau":"τ","upsilon":"υ","phi":"φ","chi":"χ","psi":"ψ","omega":"ω","thetasym":"ϑ","upsih":"ϒ","piv":"ϖ","bull":"•","hellip":"…","prime":"′","Prime":"″","oline":"‾","frasl":"⁄","weierp":"℘","image":"ℑ","real":"ℜ","trade":"™","alefsym":"ℵ","larr":"←","uarr":"↑","rarr":"→","darr":"↓","harr":"↔","crarr":"↵","lArr":"⇐","uArr":"⇑","rArr":"⇒","dArr":"⇓","hArr":"⇔","forall":"∀","part":"∂","exist":"∃","empty":"∅","nabla":"∇","isin":"∈","notin":"∉","ni":"∋","prod":"∏","sum":"∑","minus":"−","lowast":"∗","radic":"√","prop":"∝","infin":"∞","ang":"∠","and":"∧","or":"∨","cap":"∩","cup":"∪","int":"∫","there4":"∴","sim":"∼","cong":"≅","asymp":"≈","ne":"≠","equiv":"≡","le":"≤","ge":"≥","sub":"⊂","sup":"⊃","nsub":"⊄","sube":"⊆","supe":"⊇","oplus":"⊕","otimes":"⊗","perp":"⊥","sdot":"⋅","lceil":"⌈","rceil":"⌉","lfloor":"⌊","rfloor":"⌋","lang":"〈","rang":"〉","loz":"◊","spades":"♠","clubs":"♣","hearts":"♥","diams":"♦","\"":"quot","amp":"&","lt":"<","gt":">","OElig":"Œ","oelig":"œ","Scaron":"Š","scaron":"š","Yuml":"Ÿ","circ":"ˆ","tilde":"˜","ndash":"–","mdash":"—","lsquo":"‘","rsquo":"’","sbquo":"‚","ldquo":"“","rdquo":"”","bdquo":"„","dagger":"†","Dagger":"‡","permil":"‰","lsaquo":"‹","rsaquo":"›","euro":"€"};
    if(!window.HTML_ESC_MAP_EXP)
        window.HTML_ESC_MAP_EXP = new RegExp("&("+Object.keys(HTML_ESC_MAP).join("|")+");","g");
    return s?s.replace(window.HTML_ESC_MAP_EXP,function(x){
        return HTML_ESC_MAP[x.substring(1,x.length-1)]||x;
    }):s;
}

Usage

htmldecode("&sum;&nbsp;&gt;&euro;");
2
  • 1
    be careful with nbsp char, I had to manually replace it because this example use a normal space. Mar 23, 2018 at 17:19
  • 1
    How about for characters like &#232;? Dec 31, 2018 at 22:05
11

A more functional approach to @William Lahti's answer:

var entities = {
    'amp': '&',
    'apos': '\'',
    '#x27': '\'',
    '#x2F': '/',
    '#39': '\'',
    '#47': '/',
    'lt': '<',
    'gt': '>',
    'nbsp': ' ',
    'quot': '"'
};

function decodeHTMLEntities(text) {
    return text.replace(/&([^;]+);/gm, function (match, entity) {
        return entities[entity] || match
    })
}

console.log(decodeHTMLEntities('Large &lt; &#163; 500'));

5
  • 2
    this doesn't address the problem of the decodeHTMLEntities('&#228;') or ä :) Oct 3, 2017 at 12:59
  • 1
    The list is surely not complete, it is just a rewrite of the accepted answer. You can add whatever you want to the entities list, just add '#228': 'ä'.
    – omerts
    Oct 17, 2017 at 9:52
  • 1
    I think doing that for the ****** thousand special characters tath could be there could mean the death :( Oct 17, 2017 at 12:31
  • If you need to support all chars, you are absolutely right. As I said, this is a rewrite of the accepted answer.
    – omerts
    Oct 18, 2017 at 14:14
  • 2
    And incidentally, this is exactly what people like me need. I required a short list I could manage to put in a gatsby utility where document is unavailable. Wholly bulletproof isn't always the goal.
    – Kai Qing
    Aug 28, 2019 at 16:24
9

Injecting untrusted HTML into the page is dangerous as explained in How to decode HTML entities using jQuery?.

One alternative is to use a JavaScript-only implementation of PHP's html_entity_decode (from http://phpjs.org/functions/html_entity_decode:424). The example would then be something like:

var varTitle = html_entity_decode("Chris&apos; corner");
1
  • 2
    Actually, the current version of html_entity_decode doesn't handle &apos;.
    – studgeek
    Mar 21, 2012 at 19:23
2

I know I'm a bit late to the game, but I thought I might provide the following snippet as an example of how I decode HTML entities using jQuery:

var varTitleE = "Chris&apos; corner";
var varTitleD = $("<div/>").html(varTitleE).text();

console.log(varTitleE + " vs. " + varTitleD);​​​​​​​​​​​

Don't forget to fire-up your inspector/firebug to see the console results -- or simply replace console.log(...) w/alert(...)

That said, here's what my console via the Google Chrome inspector read:

Chris&apos; corner vs. Chris' corner
2

Because @Robert K and @mattcasey both have good code, I thought I'd contribute here with a CoffeeScript version, in case anyone in the future could use it:

    String::unescape = (strict = false) ->
      ###
      # Take escaped text, and return the unescaped version
      #
      # @param string str | String to be used
      # @param bool strict | Stict mode will remove all HTML
      #
      # Test it here:
      # https://jsfiddle.net/tigerhawkvok/t9pn1dn5/
      #
      # Code: https://gist.github.com/tigerhawkvok/285b8631ed6ebef4446d
      ###
      # Create a dummy element
      element = document.createElement("div")
      decodeHTMLEntities = (str) ->
        if str? and typeof str is "string"
          unless strict is true
            # escape HTML tags
            str = escape(str).replace(/%26/g,'&').replace(/%23/g,'#').replace(/%3B/g,';')
          else
            str = str.replace(/<script[^>]*>([\S\s]*?)<\/script>/gmi, '')
            str = str.replace(/<\/?\w(?:[^"'>]|"[^"]*"|'[^']*')*>/gmi, '')
          element.innerHTML = str
          if element.innerText
            # Do we support innerText?
            str = element.innerText
            element.innerText = ""
          else
            # Firefox
            str = element.textContent
            element.textContent = ""
        unescape(str)
      # Remove encoded or double-encoded tags
      fixHtmlEncodings = (string) ->
        string = string.replace(/\&amp;#/mg, '&#') # The rest, for double-encodings
        string = string.replace(/\&quot;/mg, '"')
        string = string.replace(/\&quote;/mg, '"')
        string = string.replace(/\&#95;/mg, '_')
        string = string.replace(/\&#39;/mg, "'")
        string = string.replace(/\&#34;/mg, '"')
        string = string.replace(/\&#62;/mg, '>')
        string = string.replace(/\&#60;/mg, '<')
        string
      # Run it
      tmp = fixHtmlEncodings(this)
      decodeHTMLEntities(tmp)

See https://jsfiddle.net/tigerhawkvok/t9pn1dn5/7/ or https://gist.github.com/tigerhawkvok/285b8631ed6ebef4446d (includes compiled JS, and is probably updated compared to this answer)

0

To do it in pure javascript without jquery or predefining everything you can cycle the encoded html string through an elements innerHTML and innerText(/textContent) properties for every decode step that is required:

<html>
  <head>
    <title>For every decode step, cycle through innerHTML and innerText </title>
    <script>
function decode(str) {
  var d = document.createElement("div");
  d.innerHTML = str; 
  return typeof d.innerText !== 'undefined' ? d.innerText : d.textContent;
}
    </script>
  </head>
  <body>
    <script>
var encodedString = "&lt;p&gt;name&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style=\"font-size:xx-small;\"&gt;ajde&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;da&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;";
    </script>
    <input type=button onclick="document.body.innerHTML=decode(encodedString)"/>
  </body>
</html>
-3

I think that is the exact opposite of the solution chosen.

var decoded = $("<div/>").text(encodedStr).html();

Try it :)

1
  • This method is not safe. You can include JavaScript in encodedStr which will be run. Use Robert K's method.
    – Gavin
    Feb 19, 2014 at 18:29

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