What is the best Math Font for use with Minion Pro font?












15















I have began using the Minion Pro series of fonts and compiling with XeLaTeX. However, despite the typeface changing, I still have the same CM Modern Math fonts. Do any of you have a good suggestion for a good math font that works with Minion Pro?



I have used usepackage{mathastext} and the italic varient usepackage[italic]{mathastext} but the 'f' in math mode is very awkward and too close to the parethesis. The code that produces this effects is:



documentclass{article}
usepackage{fontspec}
defaultfontfeatures{Mapping=tex}
setmainfont{Minion Pro}
usepackage[italic]{mathastext}

begin{document}
This is the standard Minion Pro Fontldots My issue is with the 'f' in italic math mode. It needs more space. For example:

begin{equation}
f(x) = x^2 + f(n-1)
end{equation}

end{document}


Is there a better option than usepackage{mathastext}? or is there a way to adjust this minor issue? I have never been able to get usepackage{MnSymbol} working (I keep getting a Command mathdollar already defined error) and Minion Math is well... pricey.










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Welcome to TeX.SX! Usually, we don't put a greeting or a “thank you” in our posts. While this might seem strange at first, it is not a sign of lack of politeness, but rather part of our trying to keep everything very concise. Accepting and upvoting answers is the preferred way here to say “thank you” to users who helped you.

    – Martin Schröder
    Nov 17 '13 at 22:02











  • the answers provide specific Minion packages which are presumably a better choice; but for the record let me mention that you can issue MTsetmathskips {f}{0mu}{1mu} to have extra white space of 1mu automatically inserted in math mode after each f. (adjust this to the value of your taste)

    – jfbu
    Mar 11 '14 at 12:56













  • Pricey is an understatement.

    – JPi
    Jan 21 at 4:06











  • I too suggest "MnSymbol" is the best combination with MinionPro...

    – MadyYuvi
    Jan 21 at 4:48
















15















I have began using the Minion Pro series of fonts and compiling with XeLaTeX. However, despite the typeface changing, I still have the same CM Modern Math fonts. Do any of you have a good suggestion for a good math font that works with Minion Pro?



I have used usepackage{mathastext} and the italic varient usepackage[italic]{mathastext} but the 'f' in math mode is very awkward and too close to the parethesis. The code that produces this effects is:



documentclass{article}
usepackage{fontspec}
defaultfontfeatures{Mapping=tex}
setmainfont{Minion Pro}
usepackage[italic]{mathastext}

begin{document}
This is the standard Minion Pro Fontldots My issue is with the 'f' in italic math mode. It needs more space. For example:

begin{equation}
f(x) = x^2 + f(n-1)
end{equation}

end{document}


Is there a better option than usepackage{mathastext}? or is there a way to adjust this minor issue? I have never been able to get usepackage{MnSymbol} working (I keep getting a Command mathdollar already defined error) and Minion Math is well... pricey.










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Welcome to TeX.SX! Usually, we don't put a greeting or a “thank you” in our posts. While this might seem strange at first, it is not a sign of lack of politeness, but rather part of our trying to keep everything very concise. Accepting and upvoting answers is the preferred way here to say “thank you” to users who helped you.

    – Martin Schröder
    Nov 17 '13 at 22:02











  • the answers provide specific Minion packages which are presumably a better choice; but for the record let me mention that you can issue MTsetmathskips {f}{0mu}{1mu} to have extra white space of 1mu automatically inserted in math mode after each f. (adjust this to the value of your taste)

    – jfbu
    Mar 11 '14 at 12:56













  • Pricey is an understatement.

    – JPi
    Jan 21 at 4:06











  • I too suggest "MnSymbol" is the best combination with MinionPro...

    – MadyYuvi
    Jan 21 at 4:48














15












15








15


6






I have began using the Minion Pro series of fonts and compiling with XeLaTeX. However, despite the typeface changing, I still have the same CM Modern Math fonts. Do any of you have a good suggestion for a good math font that works with Minion Pro?



I have used usepackage{mathastext} and the italic varient usepackage[italic]{mathastext} but the 'f' in math mode is very awkward and too close to the parethesis. The code that produces this effects is:



documentclass{article}
usepackage{fontspec}
defaultfontfeatures{Mapping=tex}
setmainfont{Minion Pro}
usepackage[italic]{mathastext}

begin{document}
This is the standard Minion Pro Fontldots My issue is with the 'f' in italic math mode. It needs more space. For example:

begin{equation}
f(x) = x^2 + f(n-1)
end{equation}

end{document}


Is there a better option than usepackage{mathastext}? or is there a way to adjust this minor issue? I have never been able to get usepackage{MnSymbol} working (I keep getting a Command mathdollar already defined error) and Minion Math is well... pricey.










share|improve this question
















I have began using the Minion Pro series of fonts and compiling with XeLaTeX. However, despite the typeface changing, I still have the same CM Modern Math fonts. Do any of you have a good suggestion for a good math font that works with Minion Pro?



I have used usepackage{mathastext} and the italic varient usepackage[italic]{mathastext} but the 'f' in math mode is very awkward and too close to the parethesis. The code that produces this effects is:



documentclass{article}
usepackage{fontspec}
defaultfontfeatures{Mapping=tex}
setmainfont{Minion Pro}
usepackage[italic]{mathastext}

begin{document}
This is the standard Minion Pro Fontldots My issue is with the 'f' in italic math mode. It needs more space. For example:

begin{equation}
f(x) = x^2 + f(n-1)
end{equation}

end{document}


Is there a better option than usepackage{mathastext}? or is there a way to adjust this minor issue? I have never been able to get usepackage{MnSymbol} working (I keep getting a Command mathdollar already defined error) and Minion Math is well... pricey.







fonts math-mode xetex fontspec






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 21 at 4:06









JPi

9,59621550




9,59621550










asked Nov 17 '13 at 21:42









MarkMark

13818




13818








  • 1





    Welcome to TeX.SX! Usually, we don't put a greeting or a “thank you” in our posts. While this might seem strange at first, it is not a sign of lack of politeness, but rather part of our trying to keep everything very concise. Accepting and upvoting answers is the preferred way here to say “thank you” to users who helped you.

    – Martin Schröder
    Nov 17 '13 at 22:02











  • the answers provide specific Minion packages which are presumably a better choice; but for the record let me mention that you can issue MTsetmathskips {f}{0mu}{1mu} to have extra white space of 1mu automatically inserted in math mode after each f. (adjust this to the value of your taste)

    – jfbu
    Mar 11 '14 at 12:56













  • Pricey is an understatement.

    – JPi
    Jan 21 at 4:06











  • I too suggest "MnSymbol" is the best combination with MinionPro...

    – MadyYuvi
    Jan 21 at 4:48














  • 1





    Welcome to TeX.SX! Usually, we don't put a greeting or a “thank you” in our posts. While this might seem strange at first, it is not a sign of lack of politeness, but rather part of our trying to keep everything very concise. Accepting and upvoting answers is the preferred way here to say “thank you” to users who helped you.

    – Martin Schröder
    Nov 17 '13 at 22:02











  • the answers provide specific Minion packages which are presumably a better choice; but for the record let me mention that you can issue MTsetmathskips {f}{0mu}{1mu} to have extra white space of 1mu automatically inserted in math mode after each f. (adjust this to the value of your taste)

    – jfbu
    Mar 11 '14 at 12:56













  • Pricey is an understatement.

    – JPi
    Jan 21 at 4:06











  • I too suggest "MnSymbol" is the best combination with MinionPro...

    – MadyYuvi
    Jan 21 at 4:48








1




1





Welcome to TeX.SX! Usually, we don't put a greeting or a “thank you” in our posts. While this might seem strange at first, it is not a sign of lack of politeness, but rather part of our trying to keep everything very concise. Accepting and upvoting answers is the preferred way here to say “thank you” to users who helped you.

– Martin Schröder
Nov 17 '13 at 22:02





Welcome to TeX.SX! Usually, we don't put a greeting or a “thank you” in our posts. While this might seem strange at first, it is not a sign of lack of politeness, but rather part of our trying to keep everything very concise. Accepting and upvoting answers is the preferred way here to say “thank you” to users who helped you.

– Martin Schröder
Nov 17 '13 at 22:02













the answers provide specific Minion packages which are presumably a better choice; but for the record let me mention that you can issue MTsetmathskips {f}{0mu}{1mu} to have extra white space of 1mu automatically inserted in math mode after each f. (adjust this to the value of your taste)

– jfbu
Mar 11 '14 at 12:56







the answers provide specific Minion packages which are presumably a better choice; but for the record let me mention that you can issue MTsetmathskips {f}{0mu}{1mu} to have extra white space of 1mu automatically inserted in math mode after each f. (adjust this to the value of your taste)

– jfbu
Mar 11 '14 at 12:56















Pricey is an understatement.

– JPi
Jan 21 at 4:06





Pricey is an understatement.

– JPi
Jan 21 at 4:06













I too suggest "MnSymbol" is the best combination with MinionPro...

– MadyYuvi
Jan 21 at 4:48





I too suggest "MnSymbol" is the best combination with MinionPro...

– MadyYuvi
Jan 21 at 4:48










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















15














I suggest to use the MinionPro package. It works under XeLaTeX and pdfLaTeX. It is part of the Font Pro package available from https://github.com/sebschub/FontPro. Follow the instructions there to install it.



The following MWE



documentclass{article}

usepackage{MinionPro}

begin{document}
This is the standard Minion Pro Fontldots My issue is with the 'f' in italic math mode. It needs more space. For example:

begin{equation}
f(x) = x^2 + f(n-1)
end{equation}

end{document}


yields



enter image description here



Another solution is to use the MnSymbols package. To avoid the problem with the mathdollar already defined error one can use the following workaround.



usepackage{fontspec}
usepackage{etoolbox}

defaultfontfeatures{Mapping=tex}
setmainfont{Minion Pro}

usepackage{MnSymbol}

% the next line makes the definition of mathdollar from MnSymbol void.
undefmathdollar

% the next 3 lines reinstate the definition of mathdollar from MnSymbols
% at the begin of the document
makeatletter
AtBeginDocument{DeclareRobustCommand{mathdollar{Mn@Text@With@MathVersion{textdollar}}}
makeatother





share|improve this answer





















  • 4





    Under xetex, you can use fontspec and the command setmainfont{Minion Pro} in order to use the opentype font for text, and load the MinionPro package with the ‘onlymath’ option.

    – Bernard
    Nov 17 '13 at 22:01













  • I have looked at the MinionPro package before, I just wanted something that was more "independent" than a downloaded package and faster to work with. Preferably something that comes with CTAN. +1 for finding a great match however.

    – Mark
    Nov 17 '13 at 22:03













  • The workaround for the mathdollar command was perfect and I just got the MinionPro Package working - it is gorgeous. Is it necessary to redefine mathdollar it if it is not going to be used?

    – Mark
    Nov 18 '13 at 2:56








  • 1





    No, you can leave out the definition of mathdollar. In such case it will resort to the original one (and you can notice the different font for $ with the two solutions).

    – Guido
    Nov 18 '13 at 3:51



















12














André Miede, the author of classicthesis - which uses Minion Pro, recommends the Euler Math font to use with the latter one:




"[...] loads the awesome Euler fonts for math." [emphesis mine]




(from the classicthesis documentation, page 6)






share|improve this answer
























  • This has an OTF version: github.com/khaledhosny/euler-otf

    – Davislor
    Jan 21 at 8:36





















6














According to the German Wikipedia article there is a Minion Math font by Typoma, specifically designed for Minion Pro.



Find more information on their homepage at http://www.typoma.com/de/schriften.html






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    The OP explicitly mentions Minion Math.

    – Guido
    Nov 18 '13 at 5:31











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3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









15














I suggest to use the MinionPro package. It works under XeLaTeX and pdfLaTeX. It is part of the Font Pro package available from https://github.com/sebschub/FontPro. Follow the instructions there to install it.



The following MWE



documentclass{article}

usepackage{MinionPro}

begin{document}
This is the standard Minion Pro Fontldots My issue is with the 'f' in italic math mode. It needs more space. For example:

begin{equation}
f(x) = x^2 + f(n-1)
end{equation}

end{document}


yields



enter image description here



Another solution is to use the MnSymbols package. To avoid the problem with the mathdollar already defined error one can use the following workaround.



usepackage{fontspec}
usepackage{etoolbox}

defaultfontfeatures{Mapping=tex}
setmainfont{Minion Pro}

usepackage{MnSymbol}

% the next line makes the definition of mathdollar from MnSymbol void.
undefmathdollar

% the next 3 lines reinstate the definition of mathdollar from MnSymbols
% at the begin of the document
makeatletter
AtBeginDocument{DeclareRobustCommand{mathdollar{Mn@Text@With@MathVersion{textdollar}}}
makeatother





share|improve this answer





















  • 4





    Under xetex, you can use fontspec and the command setmainfont{Minion Pro} in order to use the opentype font for text, and load the MinionPro package with the ‘onlymath’ option.

    – Bernard
    Nov 17 '13 at 22:01













  • I have looked at the MinionPro package before, I just wanted something that was more "independent" than a downloaded package and faster to work with. Preferably something that comes with CTAN. +1 for finding a great match however.

    – Mark
    Nov 17 '13 at 22:03













  • The workaround for the mathdollar command was perfect and I just got the MinionPro Package working - it is gorgeous. Is it necessary to redefine mathdollar it if it is not going to be used?

    – Mark
    Nov 18 '13 at 2:56








  • 1





    No, you can leave out the definition of mathdollar. In such case it will resort to the original one (and you can notice the different font for $ with the two solutions).

    – Guido
    Nov 18 '13 at 3:51
















15














I suggest to use the MinionPro package. It works under XeLaTeX and pdfLaTeX. It is part of the Font Pro package available from https://github.com/sebschub/FontPro. Follow the instructions there to install it.



The following MWE



documentclass{article}

usepackage{MinionPro}

begin{document}
This is the standard Minion Pro Fontldots My issue is with the 'f' in italic math mode. It needs more space. For example:

begin{equation}
f(x) = x^2 + f(n-1)
end{equation}

end{document}


yields



enter image description here



Another solution is to use the MnSymbols package. To avoid the problem with the mathdollar already defined error one can use the following workaround.



usepackage{fontspec}
usepackage{etoolbox}

defaultfontfeatures{Mapping=tex}
setmainfont{Minion Pro}

usepackage{MnSymbol}

% the next line makes the definition of mathdollar from MnSymbol void.
undefmathdollar

% the next 3 lines reinstate the definition of mathdollar from MnSymbols
% at the begin of the document
makeatletter
AtBeginDocument{DeclareRobustCommand{mathdollar{Mn@Text@With@MathVersion{textdollar}}}
makeatother





share|improve this answer





















  • 4





    Under xetex, you can use fontspec and the command setmainfont{Minion Pro} in order to use the opentype font for text, and load the MinionPro package with the ‘onlymath’ option.

    – Bernard
    Nov 17 '13 at 22:01













  • I have looked at the MinionPro package before, I just wanted something that was more "independent" than a downloaded package and faster to work with. Preferably something that comes with CTAN. +1 for finding a great match however.

    – Mark
    Nov 17 '13 at 22:03













  • The workaround for the mathdollar command was perfect and I just got the MinionPro Package working - it is gorgeous. Is it necessary to redefine mathdollar it if it is not going to be used?

    – Mark
    Nov 18 '13 at 2:56








  • 1





    No, you can leave out the definition of mathdollar. In such case it will resort to the original one (and you can notice the different font for $ with the two solutions).

    – Guido
    Nov 18 '13 at 3:51














15












15








15







I suggest to use the MinionPro package. It works under XeLaTeX and pdfLaTeX. It is part of the Font Pro package available from https://github.com/sebschub/FontPro. Follow the instructions there to install it.



The following MWE



documentclass{article}

usepackage{MinionPro}

begin{document}
This is the standard Minion Pro Fontldots My issue is with the 'f' in italic math mode. It needs more space. For example:

begin{equation}
f(x) = x^2 + f(n-1)
end{equation}

end{document}


yields



enter image description here



Another solution is to use the MnSymbols package. To avoid the problem with the mathdollar already defined error one can use the following workaround.



usepackage{fontspec}
usepackage{etoolbox}

defaultfontfeatures{Mapping=tex}
setmainfont{Minion Pro}

usepackage{MnSymbol}

% the next line makes the definition of mathdollar from MnSymbol void.
undefmathdollar

% the next 3 lines reinstate the definition of mathdollar from MnSymbols
% at the begin of the document
makeatletter
AtBeginDocument{DeclareRobustCommand{mathdollar{Mn@Text@With@MathVersion{textdollar}}}
makeatother





share|improve this answer















I suggest to use the MinionPro package. It works under XeLaTeX and pdfLaTeX. It is part of the Font Pro package available from https://github.com/sebschub/FontPro. Follow the instructions there to install it.



The following MWE



documentclass{article}

usepackage{MinionPro}

begin{document}
This is the standard Minion Pro Fontldots My issue is with the 'f' in italic math mode. It needs more space. For example:

begin{equation}
f(x) = x^2 + f(n-1)
end{equation}

end{document}


yields



enter image description here



Another solution is to use the MnSymbols package. To avoid the problem with the mathdollar already defined error one can use the following workaround.



usepackage{fontspec}
usepackage{etoolbox}

defaultfontfeatures{Mapping=tex}
setmainfont{Minion Pro}

usepackage{MnSymbol}

% the next line makes the definition of mathdollar from MnSymbol void.
undefmathdollar

% the next 3 lines reinstate the definition of mathdollar from MnSymbols
% at the begin of the document
makeatletter
AtBeginDocument{DeclareRobustCommand{mathdollar{Mn@Text@With@MathVersion{textdollar}}}
makeatother






share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 18 '13 at 0:27

























answered Nov 17 '13 at 21:56









GuidoGuido

24.2k54987




24.2k54987








  • 4





    Under xetex, you can use fontspec and the command setmainfont{Minion Pro} in order to use the opentype font for text, and load the MinionPro package with the ‘onlymath’ option.

    – Bernard
    Nov 17 '13 at 22:01













  • I have looked at the MinionPro package before, I just wanted something that was more "independent" than a downloaded package and faster to work with. Preferably something that comes with CTAN. +1 for finding a great match however.

    – Mark
    Nov 17 '13 at 22:03













  • The workaround for the mathdollar command was perfect and I just got the MinionPro Package working - it is gorgeous. Is it necessary to redefine mathdollar it if it is not going to be used?

    – Mark
    Nov 18 '13 at 2:56








  • 1





    No, you can leave out the definition of mathdollar. In such case it will resort to the original one (and you can notice the different font for $ with the two solutions).

    – Guido
    Nov 18 '13 at 3:51














  • 4





    Under xetex, you can use fontspec and the command setmainfont{Minion Pro} in order to use the opentype font for text, and load the MinionPro package with the ‘onlymath’ option.

    – Bernard
    Nov 17 '13 at 22:01













  • I have looked at the MinionPro package before, I just wanted something that was more "independent" than a downloaded package and faster to work with. Preferably something that comes with CTAN. +1 for finding a great match however.

    – Mark
    Nov 17 '13 at 22:03













  • The workaround for the mathdollar command was perfect and I just got the MinionPro Package working - it is gorgeous. Is it necessary to redefine mathdollar it if it is not going to be used?

    – Mark
    Nov 18 '13 at 2:56








  • 1





    No, you can leave out the definition of mathdollar. In such case it will resort to the original one (and you can notice the different font for $ with the two solutions).

    – Guido
    Nov 18 '13 at 3:51








4




4





Under xetex, you can use fontspec and the command setmainfont{Minion Pro} in order to use the opentype font for text, and load the MinionPro package with the ‘onlymath’ option.

– Bernard
Nov 17 '13 at 22:01







Under xetex, you can use fontspec and the command setmainfont{Minion Pro} in order to use the opentype font for text, and load the MinionPro package with the ‘onlymath’ option.

– Bernard
Nov 17 '13 at 22:01















I have looked at the MinionPro package before, I just wanted something that was more "independent" than a downloaded package and faster to work with. Preferably something that comes with CTAN. +1 for finding a great match however.

– Mark
Nov 17 '13 at 22:03







I have looked at the MinionPro package before, I just wanted something that was more "independent" than a downloaded package and faster to work with. Preferably something that comes with CTAN. +1 for finding a great match however.

– Mark
Nov 17 '13 at 22:03















The workaround for the mathdollar command was perfect and I just got the MinionPro Package working - it is gorgeous. Is it necessary to redefine mathdollar it if it is not going to be used?

– Mark
Nov 18 '13 at 2:56







The workaround for the mathdollar command was perfect and I just got the MinionPro Package working - it is gorgeous. Is it necessary to redefine mathdollar it if it is not going to be used?

– Mark
Nov 18 '13 at 2:56






1




1





No, you can leave out the definition of mathdollar. In such case it will resort to the original one (and you can notice the different font for $ with the two solutions).

– Guido
Nov 18 '13 at 3:51





No, you can leave out the definition of mathdollar. In such case it will resort to the original one (and you can notice the different font for $ with the two solutions).

– Guido
Nov 18 '13 at 3:51











12














André Miede, the author of classicthesis - which uses Minion Pro, recommends the Euler Math font to use with the latter one:




"[...] loads the awesome Euler fonts for math." [emphesis mine]




(from the classicthesis documentation, page 6)






share|improve this answer
























  • This has an OTF version: github.com/khaledhosny/euler-otf

    – Davislor
    Jan 21 at 8:36


















12














André Miede, the author of classicthesis - which uses Minion Pro, recommends the Euler Math font to use with the latter one:




"[...] loads the awesome Euler fonts for math." [emphesis mine]




(from the classicthesis documentation, page 6)






share|improve this answer
























  • This has an OTF version: github.com/khaledhosny/euler-otf

    – Davislor
    Jan 21 at 8:36
















12












12








12







André Miede, the author of classicthesis - which uses Minion Pro, recommends the Euler Math font to use with the latter one:




"[...] loads the awesome Euler fonts for math." [emphesis mine]




(from the classicthesis documentation, page 6)






share|improve this answer













André Miede, the author of classicthesis - which uses Minion Pro, recommends the Euler Math font to use with the latter one:




"[...] loads the awesome Euler fonts for math." [emphesis mine]




(from the classicthesis documentation, page 6)







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 17 '13 at 22:10









RubenRuben

11.3k32365




11.3k32365













  • This has an OTF version: github.com/khaledhosny/euler-otf

    – Davislor
    Jan 21 at 8:36





















  • This has an OTF version: github.com/khaledhosny/euler-otf

    – Davislor
    Jan 21 at 8:36



















This has an OTF version: github.com/khaledhosny/euler-otf

– Davislor
Jan 21 at 8:36







This has an OTF version: github.com/khaledhosny/euler-otf

– Davislor
Jan 21 at 8:36













6














According to the German Wikipedia article there is a Minion Math font by Typoma, specifically designed for Minion Pro.



Find more information on their homepage at http://www.typoma.com/de/schriften.html






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    The OP explicitly mentions Minion Math.

    – Guido
    Nov 18 '13 at 5:31
















6














According to the German Wikipedia article there is a Minion Math font by Typoma, specifically designed for Minion Pro.



Find more information on their homepage at http://www.typoma.com/de/schriften.html






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    The OP explicitly mentions Minion Math.

    – Guido
    Nov 18 '13 at 5:31














6












6








6







According to the German Wikipedia article there is a Minion Math font by Typoma, specifically designed for Minion Pro.



Find more information on their homepage at http://www.typoma.com/de/schriften.html






share|improve this answer













According to the German Wikipedia article there is a Minion Math font by Typoma, specifically designed for Minion Pro.



Find more information on their homepage at http://www.typoma.com/de/schriften.html







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 18 '13 at 5:16









Uwe ZiegenhagenUwe Ziegenhagen

9,32243980




9,32243980








  • 1





    The OP explicitly mentions Minion Math.

    – Guido
    Nov 18 '13 at 5:31














  • 1





    The OP explicitly mentions Minion Math.

    – Guido
    Nov 18 '13 at 5:31








1




1





The OP explicitly mentions Minion Math.

– Guido
Nov 18 '13 at 5:31





The OP explicitly mentions Minion Math.

– Guido
Nov 18 '13 at 5:31


















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