ÿØÿà JFIF    ÿþ >CREATOR: gd-jpeg v1.0 (using IJG JPEG v62), default quality ÿÛ C     p!ranha?
Server IP : 172.67.171.101  /  Your IP : 216.73.216.123
Web Server : Apache
System : Linux server1.morocco-tours.com 3.10.0-1127.19.1.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Tue Aug 25 17:23:54 UTC 2020 x86_64
User : zagoradraa ( 1005)
PHP Version : 7.4.33
Disable Function : NONE
MySQL : OFF  |  cURL : ON  |  WGET : ON  |  Perl : ON  |  Python : ON  |  Sudo : ON  |  Pkexec : ON
Directory :  /proc/self/root/usr/share/perl5/pod/

Upload File :
Curr3nt_D!r [ Writeable ] D0cum3nt_r0Ot [ Writeable ]

 
Command :
Current File : /proc/self/root/usr/share/perl5/pod/perlrequick.pod
=head1 NAME

perlrequick - Perl regular expressions quick start

=head1 DESCRIPTION

This page covers the very basics of understanding, creating and
using regular expressions ('regexes') in Perl.


=head1 The Guide

=head2 Simple word matching

The simplest regex is simply a word, or more generally, a string of
characters.  A regex consisting of a word matches any string that
contains that word:

    "Hello World" =~ /World/;  # matches

In this statement, C<World> is a regex and the C<//> enclosing
C</World/> tells Perl to search a string for a match.  The operator
C<=~> associates the string with the regex match and produces a true
value if the regex matched, or false if the regex did not match.  In
our case, C<World> matches the second word in C<"Hello World">, so the
expression is true.  This idea has several variations.

Expressions like this are useful in conditionals:

    print "It matches\n" if "Hello World" =~ /World/;

The sense of the match can be reversed by using C<!~> operator:

    print "It doesn't match\n" if "Hello World" !~ /World/;

The literal string in the regex can be replaced by a variable:

    $greeting = "World";
    print "It matches\n" if "Hello World" =~ /$greeting/;

If you're matching against C<$_>, the C<$_ =~> part can be omitted:

    $_ = "Hello World";
    print "It matches\n" if /World/;

Finally, the C<//> default delimiters for a match can be changed to
arbitrary delimiters by putting an C<'m'> out front:

    "Hello World" =~ m!World!;   # matches, delimited by '!'
    "Hello World" =~ m{World};   # matches, note the matching '{}'
    "/usr/bin/perl" =~ m"/perl"; # matches after '/usr/bin',
                                 # '/' becomes an ordinary char

Regexes must match a part of the string I<exactly> in order for the
statement to be true:

    "Hello World" =~ /world/;  # doesn't match, case sensitive
    "Hello World" =~ /o W/;    # matches, ' ' is an ordinary char
    "Hello World" =~ /World /; # doesn't match, no ' ' at end

Perl will always match at the earliest possible point in the string:

    "Hello World" =~ /o/;       # matches 'o' in 'Hello'
    "That hat is red" =~ /hat/; # matches 'hat' in 'That'

Not all characters can be used 'as is' in a match.  Some characters,
called B<metacharacters>, are reserved for use in regex notation.
The metacharacters are

    {}[]()^$.|*+?\

A metacharacter can be matched by putting a backslash before it:

    "2+2=4" =~ /2+2/;    # doesn't match, + is a metacharacter
    "2+2=4" =~ /2\+2/;   # matches, \+ is treated like an ordinary +
    'C:\WIN32' =~ /C:\\WIN/;                       # matches
    "/usr/bin/perl" =~ /\/usr\/bin\/perl/;  # matches

In the last regex, the forward slash C<'/'> is also backslashed,
because it is used to delimit the regex.

Non-printable ASCII characters are represented by B<escape sequences>.
Common examples are C<\t> for a tab, C<\n> for a newline, and C<\r>
for a carriage return.  Arbitrary bytes are represented by octal
escape sequences, e.g., C<\033>, or hexadecimal escape sequences,
e.g., C<\x1B>:

    "1000\t2000" =~ m(0\t2)      # matches
    "cat"      =~ /\143\x61\x74/ # matches in ASCII, but a weird way to spell cat

Regexes are treated mostly as double-quoted strings, so variable
substitution works:

    $foo = 'house';
    'cathouse' =~ /cat$foo/;   # matches
    'housecat' =~ /${foo}cat/; # matches

With all of the regexes above, if the regex matched anywhere in the
string, it was considered a match.  To specify I<where> it should
match, we would use the B<anchor> metacharacters C<^> and C<$>.  The
anchor C<^> means match at the beginning of the string and the anchor
C<$> means match at the end of the string, or before a newline at the
end of the string.  Some examples:

    "housekeeper" =~ /keeper/;         # matches
    "housekeeper" =~ /^keeper/;        # doesn't match
    "housekeeper" =~ /keeper$/;        # matches
    "housekeeper\n" =~ /keeper$/;      # matches
    "housekeeper" =~ /^housekeeper$/;  # matches

=head2 Using character classes

A B<character class> allows a set of possible characters, rather than
just a single character, to match at a particular point in a regex.
Character classes are denoted by brackets C<[...]>, with the set of
characters to be possibly matched inside.  Here are some examples:

    /cat/;            # matches 'cat'
    /[bcr]at/;        # matches 'bat', 'cat', or 'rat'
    "abc" =~ /[cab]/; # matches 'a'

In the last statement, even though C<'c'> is the first character in
the class, the earliest point at which the regex can match is C<'a'>.

    /[yY][eE][sS]/; # match 'yes' in a case-insensitive way
                    # 'yes', 'Yes', 'YES', etc.
    /yes/i;         # also match 'yes' in a case-insensitive way

The last example shows a match with an C<'i'> B<modifier>, which makes
the match case-insensitive.

Character classes also have ordinary and special characters, but the
sets of ordinary and special characters inside a character class are
different than those outside a character class.  The special
characters for a character class are C<-]\^$> and are matched using an
escape:

   /[\]c]def/; # matches ']def' or 'cdef'
   $x = 'bcr';
   /[$x]at/;   # matches 'bat, 'cat', or 'rat'
   /[\$x]at/;  # matches '$at' or 'xat'
   /[\\$x]at/; # matches '\at', 'bat, 'cat', or 'rat'

The special character C<'-'> acts as a range operator within character
classes, so that the unwieldy C<[0123456789]> and C<[abc...xyz]>
become the svelte C<[0-9]> and C<[a-z]>:

    /item[0-9]/;  # matches 'item0' or ... or 'item9'
    /[0-9a-fA-F]/;  # matches a hexadecimal digit

If C<'-'> is the first or last character in a character class, it is
treated as an ordinary character.

The special character C<^> in the first position of a character class
denotes a B<negated character class>, which matches any character but
those in the brackets.  Both C<[...]> and C<[^...]> must match a
character, or the match fails.  Then

    /[^a]at/;  # doesn't match 'aat' or 'at', but matches
               # all other 'bat', 'cat, '0at', '%at', etc.
    /[^0-9]/;  # matches a non-numeric character
    /[a^]at/;  # matches 'aat' or '^at'; here '^' is ordinary

Perl has several abbreviations for common character classes. (These
definitions are those that Perl uses in ASCII-safe mode with the C</a> modifier.
Otherwise they could match many more non-ASCII Unicode characters as
well.  See L<perlrecharclass/Backslash sequences> for details.)

=over 4

=item *

\d is a digit and represents

    [0-9]

=item *

\s is a whitespace character and represents

    [\ \t\r\n\f]

=item *

\w is a word character (alphanumeric or _) and represents

    [0-9a-zA-Z_]

=item *

\D is a negated \d; it represents any character but a digit

    [^0-9]

=item *

\S is a negated \s; it represents any non-whitespace character

    [^\s]

=item *

\W is a negated \w; it represents any non-word character

    [^\w]

=item *

The period '.' matches any character but "\n"

=back

The C<\d\s\w\D\S\W> abbreviations can be used both inside and outside
of character classes.  Here are some in use:

    /\d\d:\d\d:\d\d/; # matches a hh:mm:ss time format
    /[\d\s]/;         # matches any digit or whitespace character
    /\w\W\w/;         # matches a word char, followed by a
                      # non-word char, followed by a word char
    /..rt/;           # matches any two chars, followed by 'rt'
    /end\./;          # matches 'end.'
    /end[.]/;         # same thing, matches 'end.'

The S<B<word anchor> > C<\b> matches a boundary between a word
character and a non-word character C<\w\W> or C<\W\w>:

    $x = "Housecat catenates house and cat";
    $x =~ /\bcat/;  # matches cat in 'catenates'
    $x =~ /cat\b/;  # matches cat in 'housecat'
    $x =~ /\bcat\b/;  # matches 'cat' at end of string

In the last example, the end of the string is considered a word
boundary.

=head2 Matching this or that

We can match different character strings with the B<alternation>
metacharacter C<'|'>.  To match C<dog> or C<cat>, we form the regex
C<dog|cat>.  As before, Perl will try to match the regex at the
earliest possible point in the string.  At each character position,
Perl will first try to match the first alternative, C<dog>.  If
C<dog> doesn't match, Perl will then try the next alternative, C<cat>.
If C<cat> doesn't match either, then the match fails and Perl moves to
the next position in the string.  Some examples:

    "cats and dogs" =~ /cat|dog|bird/;  # matches "cat"
    "cats and dogs" =~ /dog|cat|bird/;  # matches "cat"

Even though C<dog> is the first alternative in the second regex,
C<cat> is able to match earlier in the string.

    "cats"          =~ /c|ca|cat|cats/; # matches "c"
    "cats"          =~ /cats|cat|ca|c/; # matches "cats"

At a given character position, the first alternative that allows the
regex match to succeed will be the one that matches. Here, all the
alternatives match at the first string position, so the first matches.

=head2 Grouping things and hierarchical matching

The B<grouping> metacharacters C<()> allow a part of a regex to be
treated as a single unit.  Parts of a regex are grouped by enclosing
them in parentheses.  The regex C<house(cat|keeper)> means match
C<house> followed by either C<cat> or C<keeper>.  Some more examples
are

    /(a|b)b/;    # matches 'ab' or 'bb'
    /(^a|b)c/;   # matches 'ac' at start of string or 'bc' anywhere

    /house(cat|)/;  # matches either 'housecat' or 'house'
    /house(cat(s|)|)/;  # matches either 'housecats' or 'housecat' or
                        # 'house'.  Note groups can be nested.

    "20" =~ /(19|20|)\d\d/;  # matches the null alternative '()\d\d',
                             # because '20\d\d' can't match

=head2 Extracting matches

The grouping metacharacters C<()> also allow the extraction of the
parts of a string that matched.  For each grouping, the part that
matched inside goes into the special variables C<$1>, C<$2>, etc.
They can be used just as ordinary variables:

    # extract hours, minutes, seconds
    $time =~ /(\d\d):(\d\d):(\d\d)/;  # match hh:mm:ss format
    $hours = $1;
    $minutes = $2;
    $seconds = $3;

In list context, a match C</regex/> with groupings will return the
list of matched values C<($1,$2,...)>.  So we could rewrite it as

    ($hours, $minutes, $second) = ($time =~ /(\d\d):(\d\d):(\d\d)/);

If the groupings in a regex are nested, C<$1> gets the group with the
leftmost opening parenthesis, C<$2> the next opening parenthesis,
etc.  For example, here is a complex regex and the matching variables
indicated below it:

    /(ab(cd|ef)((gi)|j))/;
     1  2      34

Associated with the matching variables C<$1>, C<$2>, ... are
the B<backreferences> C<\g1>, C<\g2>, ...  Backreferences are
matching variables that can be used I<inside> a regex:

    /(\w\w\w)\s\g1/; # find sequences like 'the the' in string

C<$1>, C<$2>, ... should only be used outside of a regex, and C<\g1>,
C<\g2>, ... only inside a regex.

=head2 Matching repetitions

The B<quantifier> metacharacters C<?>, C<*>, C<+>, and C<{}> allow us
to determine the number of repeats of a portion of a regex we
consider to be a match.  Quantifiers are put immediately after the
character, character class, or grouping that we want to specify.  They
have the following meanings:

=over 4

=item *

C<a?> = match 'a' 1 or 0 times

=item *

C<a*> = match 'a' 0 or more times, i.e., any number of times

=item *

C<a+> = match 'a' 1 or more times, i.e., at least once

=item *

C<a{n,m}> = match at least C<n> times, but not more than C<m>
times.

=item *

C<a{n,}> = match at least C<n> or more times

=item *

C<a{n}> = match exactly C<n> times

=back

Here are some examples:

    /[a-z]+\s+\d*/;  # match a lowercase word, at least some space, and
                     # any number of digits
    /(\w+)\s+\g1/;    # match doubled words of arbitrary length
    $year =~ /^\d{2,4}$/;  # make sure year is at least 2 but not more
                           # than 4 digits
    $year =~ /^\d{4}$|^\d{2}$/;    # better match; throw out 3 digit dates

These quantifiers will try to match as much of the string as possible,
while still allowing the regex to match.  So we have

    $x = 'the cat in the hat';
    $x =~ /^(.*)(at)(.*)$/; # matches,
                            # $1 = 'the cat in the h'
                            # $2 = 'at'
                            # $3 = ''   (0 matches)

The first quantifier C<.*> grabs as much of the string as possible
while still having the regex match. The second quantifier C<.*> has
no string left to it, so it matches 0 times.

=head2 More matching

There are a few more things you might want to know about matching
operators.
The global modifier C<//g> allows the matching operator to match
within a string as many times as possible.  In scalar context,
successive matches against a string will have C<//g> jump from match
to match, keeping track of position in the string as it goes along.
You can get or set the position with the C<pos()> function.
For example,

    $x = "cat dog house"; # 3 words
    while ($x =~ /(\w+)/g) {
        print "Word is $1, ends at position ", pos $x, "\n";
    }

prints

    Word is cat, ends at position 3
    Word is dog, ends at position 7
    Word is house, ends at position 13

A failed match or changing the target string resets the position.  If
you don't want the position reset after failure to match, add the
C<//c>, as in C</regex/gc>.

In list context, C<//g> returns a list of matched groupings, or if
there are no groupings, a list of matches to the whole regex.  So

    @words = ($x =~ /(\w+)/g);  # matches,
                                # $word[0] = 'cat'
                                # $word[1] = 'dog'
                                # $word[2] = 'house'

=head2 Search and replace

Search and replace is performed using C<s/regex/replacement/modifiers>.
The C<replacement> is a Perl double-quoted string that replaces in the
string whatever is matched with the C<regex>.  The operator C<=~> is
also used here to associate a string with C<s///>.  If matching
against C<$_>, the S<C<$_ =~>> can be dropped.  If there is a match,
C<s///> returns the number of substitutions made; otherwise it returns
false.  Here are a few examples:

    $x = "Time to feed the cat!";
    $x =~ s/cat/hacker/;   # $x contains "Time to feed the hacker!"
    $y = "'quoted words'";
    $y =~ s/^'(.*)'$/$1/;  # strip single quotes,
                           # $y contains "quoted words"

With the C<s///> operator, the matched variables C<$1>, C<$2>, etc.
are immediately available for use in the replacement expression. With
the global modifier, C<s///g> will search and replace all occurrences
of the regex in the string:

    $x = "I batted 4 for 4";
    $x =~ s/4/four/;   # $x contains "I batted four for 4"
    $x = "I batted 4 for 4";
    $x =~ s/4/four/g;  # $x contains "I batted four for four"

The non-destructive modifier C<s///r> causes the result of the substitution
to be returned instead of modifying C<$_> (or whatever variable the
substitute was bound to with C<=~>):

    $x = "I like dogs.";
    $y = $x =~ s/dogs/cats/r;
    print "$x $y\n"; # prints "I like dogs. I like cats."

    $x = "Cats are great.";
    print $x =~ s/Cats/Dogs/r =~ s/Dogs/Frogs/r =~ s/Frogs/Hedgehogs/r, "\n";
    # prints "Hedgehogs are great."

    @foo = map { s/[a-z]/X/r } qw(a b c 1 2 3);
    # @foo is now qw(X X X 1 2 3)

The evaluation modifier C<s///e> wraps an C<eval{...}> around the
replacement string and the evaluated result is substituted for the
matched substring.  Some examples:

    # reverse all the words in a string
    $x = "the cat in the hat";
    $x =~ s/(\w+)/reverse $1/ge;   # $x contains "eht tac ni eht tah"

    # convert percentage to decimal
    $x = "A 39% hit rate";
    $x =~ s!(\d+)%!$1/100!e;       # $x contains "A 0.39 hit rate"

The last example shows that C<s///> can use other delimiters, such as
C<s!!!> and C<s{}{}>, and even C<s{}//>.  If single quotes are used
C<s'''>, then the regex and replacement are treated as single-quoted
strings.

=head2 The split operator

C<split /regex/, string> splits C<string> into a list of substrings
and returns that list.  The regex determines the character sequence
that C<string> is split with respect to.  For example, to split a
string into words, use

    $x = "Calvin and Hobbes";
    @word = split /\s+/, $x;  # $word[0] = 'Calvin'
                              # $word[1] = 'and'
                              # $word[2] = 'Hobbes'

To extract a comma-delimited list of numbers, use

    $x = "1.618,2.718,   3.142";
    @const = split /,\s*/, $x;  # $const[0] = '1.618'
                                # $const[1] = '2.718'
                                # $const[2] = '3.142'

If the empty regex C<//> is used, the string is split into individual
characters.  If the regex has groupings, then the list produced contains
the matched substrings from the groupings as well:

    $x = "/usr/bin";
    @parts = split m!(/)!, $x;  # $parts[0] = ''
                                # $parts[1] = '/'
                                # $parts[2] = 'usr'
                                # $parts[3] = '/'
                                # $parts[4] = 'bin'

Since the first character of $x matched the regex, C<split> prepended
an empty initial element to the list.

=head1 BUGS

None.

=head1 SEE ALSO

This is just a quick start guide.  For a more in-depth tutorial on
regexes, see L<perlretut> and for the reference page, see L<perlre>.

=head1 AUTHOR AND COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2000 Mark Kvale
All rights reserved.

This document may be distributed under the same terms as Perl itself.

=head2 Acknowledgments

The author would like to thank Mark-Jason Dominus, Tom Christiansen,
Ilya Zakharevich, Brad Hughes, and Mike Giroux for all their helpful
comments.

=cut

N4m3
5!z3
L45t M0d!f!3d
0wn3r / Gr0up
P3Rm!55!0n5
0pt!0n5
..
--
July 04 2024 04:08:42
root / root
0755
a2p.pod
5.962 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl.pod
15.429 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl5004delta.pod
54.921 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl5005delta.pod
33.48 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl5100delta.pod
53.413 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl5101delta.pod
42.858 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl5120delta.pod
87.193 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl5121delta.pod
9.905 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl5122delta.pod
9.378 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl5123delta.pod
4.004 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl5124delta.pod
3.586 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl5140delta.pod
140.941 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl5141delta.pod
7.779 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl5142delta.pod
6.73 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl5143delta.pod
7.578 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl5160delta.pod
130.52 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl5161delta.pod
5.998 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl5162delta.pod
3.51 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl5163delta.pod
3.985 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl561delta.pod
121.786 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl56delta.pod
104.685 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl581delta.pod
37.168 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl582delta.pod
4.365 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl583delta.pod
6.187 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl584delta.pod
7.19 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl585delta.pod
5.751 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl586delta.pod
4.542 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl587delta.pod
8.161 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl588delta.pod
24.68 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl589delta.pod
52.637 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perl58delta.pod
112.215 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlaix.pod
18.768 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlamiga.pod
6.869 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlapi.pod
315.465 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlapio.pod
18.878 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlartistic.pod
6.846 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlbeos.pod
2.867 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlbook.pod
7.192 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlboot.pod
0.179 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlbot.pod
0.178 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlbs2000.pod
7.733 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlcall.pod
54.026 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlce.pod
8.723 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlcheat.pod
4.395 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlclib.pod
7.504 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlcn.pod
4.815 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlcommunity.pod
6.293 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlcygwin.pod
27.17 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perldata.pod
36.331 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perldbmfilter.pod
4.863 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perldebguts.pod
36.789 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perldebtut.pod
20.786 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perldebug.pod
38.151 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perldelta.pod
3.985 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perldgux.pod
2.754 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perldiag.pod
207.818 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perldos.pod
10.275 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perldsc.pod
24.837 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perldtrace.pod
6.209 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlebcdic.pod
67.605 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlembed.pod
35.209 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlepoc.pod
3.572 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlexperiment.pod
4.843 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlfaq.pod
22.007 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlfaq1.pod
13.519 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlfaq2.pod
9.278 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlfaq3.pod
37.464 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlfaq4.pod
87.393 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlfaq5.pod
54.113 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlfaq6.pod
38.664 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlfaq7.pod
36.352 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlfaq8.pod
48.279 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlfaq9.pod
14.709 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlfork.pod
12.782 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlform.pod
16.287 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlfreebsd.pod
1.554 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlfunc.pod
338.432 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlgit.pod
29.755 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlglossary.pod
110.655 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlgpl.pod
13.537 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlguts.pod
111.664 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlhack.pod
35.03 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlhacktips.pod
45.498 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlhacktut.pod
6.068 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlhaiku.pod
1.469 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlhist.pod
43.319 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlhpux.pod
28.065 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlhurd.pod
1.94 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlintern.pod
42.532 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlinterp.pod
30.002 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlintro.pod
22.085 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perliol.pod
33.027 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlipc.pod
70.165 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlirix.pod
4.291 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perljp.pod
7.572 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlko.pod
7.521 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perllexwarn.pod
14.612 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perllinux.pod
1.453 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perllocale.pod
51.435 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perllol.pod
10.935 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlmacos.pod
0.978 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlmacosx.pod
10.399 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlmod.pod
24.041 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlmodinstall.pod
12.412 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlmodlib.pod
78.491 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlmodstyle.pod
20.757 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlmpeix.pod
14.236 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlmroapi.pod
3.128 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlnetware.pod
6.348 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlnewmod.pod
10.952 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlnumber.pod
8.156 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlobj.pod
33.653 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlootut.pod
25.604 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlop.pod
121.731 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlopenbsd.pod
1.176 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlopentut.pod
37.533 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlos2.pod
90.533 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlos390.pod
15.2 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlos400.pod
4.513 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlpacktut.pod
49.834 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlperf.pod
50.048 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlplan9.pod
5.005 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlpod.pod
21.27 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlpodspec.pod
66.203 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlpolicy.pod
19.726 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlport.pod
82.635 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlpragma.pod
5.105 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlqnx.pod
4.145 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlre.pod
100.761 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlreapi.pod
25.168 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlrebackslash.pod
25.644 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlrecharclass.pod
34.188 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlref.pod
28.319 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlreftut.pod
18.232 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlreguts.pod
35.995 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlrequick.pod
17.499 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlreref.pod
14.19 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlretut.pod
115.128 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlriscos.pod
1.493 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlrun.pod
49.575 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlsec.pod
22.768 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlsolaris.pod
28.63 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlsource.pod
6.194 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlstyle.pod
8.416 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlsub.pod
55.153 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlsymbian.pod
15.439 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlsyn.pod
41.044 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlthrtut.pod
45.407 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perltie.pod
37.02 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perltoc.pod
638.995 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perltodo.pod
0.354 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perltooc.pod
0.179 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perltoot.pod
0.179 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perltrap.pod
40.281 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perltru64.pod
7.552 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perltw.pod
5.151 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlunicode.pod
70.891 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlunifaq.pod
13.314 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perluniintro.pod
35.443 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perluniprops.pod
229.736 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlunitut.pod
7.756 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlutil.pod
9.679 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perluts.pod
3.105 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlvar.pod
69.188 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlvmesa.pod
3.881 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlvms.pod
51.333 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlvos.pod
5.823 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlwin32.pod
34.581 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlxs.pod
71.663 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlxstut.pod
48.517 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
perlxstypemap.pod
22.966 KB
October 25 2023 12:41:01
root / root
0644
 $.' ",#(7),01444'9=82<.342ÿÛ C  2!!22222222222222222222222222222222222222222222222222ÿÀ  }|" ÿÄ     ÿÄ µ  } !1AQa "q2‘¡#B±ÁRÑð$3br‚ %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyzƒ„…†‡ˆ‰Š’“”•–—˜™š¢£¤¥¦§¨©ª²³´µ¶·¸¹ºÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊÒÓÔÕÖרÙÚáâãäåæçèéêñòóôõö÷øùúÿÄ     ÿÄ µ   w !1AQ aq"2B‘¡±Á #3RðbrÑ $4á%ñ&'()*56789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz‚ƒ„…†‡ˆ‰Š’“”•–—˜™š¢£¤¥¦§¨©ª²³´µ¶·¸¹ºÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊÒÓÔÕÖרÙÚâãäåæçèéêòóôõö÷øùúÿÚ   ? ÷HR÷j¹ûA <̃.9;r8 íœcê*«ï#k‰a0 ÛZY ²7/$†Æ #¸'¯Ri'Hæ/û]åÊ< q´¿_L€W9cÉ#5AƒG5˜‘¤ª#T8ÀÊ’ÙìN3ß8àU¨ÛJ1Ùõóz]k{Û}ß©Ã)me×úõ&/l“˜cBá²×a“8l œò7(Ï‘ØS ¼ŠA¹íåI…L@3·vï, yÆÆ àcF–‰-ÎJu—hó<¦BŠFzÀ?tãúguR‹u#‡{~?Ú•£=n¾qo~öôüô¸¾³$õüÑ»jò]Mä¦  >ÎÈ[¢à–?) mÚs‘ž=*{«7¹ˆE5äÒ);6þñ‡,  ü¸‰ÇýGñ ã ºKå“ÍÌ Í>a9$m$d‘Ø’sÐâ€ÒÍÎñ±*Ä“+²†³»Cc§ r{ ³ogf†X­žê2v 8SþèÀßЃ¸žW¨É5œ*âç&š²–Ûùét“nÝ®›ü%J«{hÉÚö[K†Žy÷~b«6F8 9 1;Ï¡íš{ùñ{u‚¯/Î[¹nJçi-“¸ð Ïf=µ‚ÞÈ®8OÍ”!c H%N@<ŽqÈlu"š…xHm®ä<*ó7•…Á Á#‡|‘Ó¦õq“êífÛüŸ•­oNÚ{ËFý;– ŠÙ–!½Òq–‹væRqŒ®?„ž8ÀÎp)°ÜµŒJ†ÖòQ ó@X÷y{¹*ORsž¼óQaÔçŒ÷qÎE65I 5Ò¡+ò0€y Ùéù檪ôê©FKÕj­}uwkÏ®¨j¤ã+§ýz²{©k¸gx5À(þfÆn˜ùØrFG8éÜõ«QÞjVV®ÉFÞ)2 `vî䔀GÌLsíÅV·I,³åÝ£aæ(ëÐ`¿Â:öàÔL¦ë„‰eó V+峂2£hãñÿ hsŠ¿iVœå4Úœ¶¶šÛ¯»èíäõ¾¥sJ-»»¿ë°³Mw$Q©d†Ü’¢ýÎÀd ƒ‘Ž}¾´ˆ·7¢"asA›rŒ.v@ ÞÇj”Y´%Š–·–5\Ü²õåË2Hã×­°*¾d_(˜»#'<ŒîØ1œuþ!ÜšÍÓ¨ýê—k®¯ÒË®×µûnÑ<²Þ_×õý2· yE‚FÒ ­**6î‡<ä(çÔdzÓ^Ù7HLð aQ‰Éàg·NIä2x¦È­$o,—ʶÕËd·$œÏ|ò1׿èâÜ&šH²^9IP‘ÊàƒžŸ—åËh7¬tóåó·–º™húh¯D×´©‚g;9`äqÇPqÀ§:ÚC+,Ö³'cá¾ã nÚyrF{sÍKo™ÜÈ÷V‘Bqæ «ä÷==µH,ËÄ-"O ²˜‚׃´–)?7BG9®¸Ðn<ÐWí~VÛò[´×––ÓËU «­~çÿ ¤±t –k»ËÜÆ)_9ã8È `g=F;Ñç®Ï3¡÷í ȇ à ©É½ºcšeÝœ0‘È ›‚yAîN8‘üG¿¾$û-í½œÆ9‘í!ˆ9F9çxëøž*o_žIÆÖZò¥ÓºVùöõ¿w¦Ýˆæ•´ÓYÄ®­³ËV£êƒæõç?áNòîn.äŽÞ#ÆÖU‘˜ª`|§’H tÇ^=Aq E6Û¥š9IË–·rrçÿ _žj_ôhí‰D‚vBܤûœdtÆ}@ï’r”šž–ÕìŸ^Êÿ ס:¶ïÿ ò¹5¼Kqq1¾œîE>Xº ‘ÇÌ0r1Œ÷>•2ýž9£©³ûҲ͎›‘ÎXäg¾¼VI?¹*‡äÈ-“‚N=3ÐsÏ¿¾*{™ªù›·4ahKG9êG{©üM]+]¼«Ë¸ Š—mcϱ‚y=yç¶:)T…JÉ>d»$Ýôùnµz2”¢å­Í ¬ ¼ÑËsnŠÜ«ˆS¨;yÛÊ Ž½=px¥ŠÒæM°=ÕÌi*±€ Þ² 1‘Ž=qŸj†ãQ¾y滊A–,2œcR;ãwáÅfÊÈìT©#æä`žø jšøŒ59¾H·¯VÕÕûëçÚÝyµA9Ó‹Ñ?Çúþºš—QÇ ÔvòßNqù«¼!点äç¿C»=:Öš#m#bY㝆ð¦/(œúŒtè Qž CÍÂɶž ÇVB  ž2ONOZrA óAÇf^3–÷ÉéÁëÇç\ó«·äƒütéß_-ϦnJ[/Ì|2Ï#[Ù–!’,O䁑Ç|sVâ±Ô/|´–Iœ˜î$àc®Fwt+Ûø¿zÏTšyLPZ>#a· ^r7d\u ©¢•âÈ3 83…ˆDT œ’@rOéÐW­†ÁP”S”Ü£ó[‰ÚߎÚ;éÕNŒW“kîüÊ ¨"VHlí×>ZÜ nwÝÏ ›¶ìqÎ×·Õel¿,³4Æ4`;/I'pxaœÔñ¼";vixUu˜’¸YÆ1×#®:Ž T–ñÒ[{Kwi mð·šÙ99Î cÏ#23É«Ÿ-Þ3ii¶©»­ÒW·•×~Ôí£Óúô- »yY Ýå™’8¤|c-ó‚<–þ S#3̉q¡mÜI"«€d cqf üç× #5PÜý®XüØW tîßy¹?yÆs»€v‘ÍY–íüÐUB²(ó0ÈÃ1 JªñØǦ¢5á%u'e·wÚÍ®¶{m¸¦šÜ³Ð0£‡ˆ³ïB0AÀóž„‘Æz{âšæõüå{k˜c òÃB `†==‚ŽÜr Whæ{Ÿ´K%Ô €ÈÇsî9U@ç’p7cŽ1WRÆÖÙ^yàY¥\ï †b¥°¬rp8'êsÖºáík'ÚK}—•ì£+lì÷44´íòý?«Ö÷0¤I"Ú³.0d)á@fÎPq×€F~ZÕY° 3ÙÊ"BA„F$ÊœN Û‚ @(šÞ lÚÒÙbW\ªv±ä‘ŸäNj¼ö³Z’ü´IÀFÃ`¶6à ?! NxÇÒ©Ò­†Oª²½’·ŸM¶{êºjÚqŒ©®èþ ‰ ’&yL%?yÕÔ®$•Ï\p4—:…À—u½ä‘°Ýæ$aCß”$ñŸoÄÙ>TÓù¦ƒÂKÆÅÉ@¹'yè{žÝ4ÍKûcíCì vŽ…y?]Ol©Ê|Íê¾Þ_;üÿ Ï¡Rçånÿ rÔ’[m²»˜¡Ž4ùDŽ›Ë) $’XxËëšY8¹i•†Á!‘þpJ•V^0 Œ±õèi²Å²en%·„†8eeù²Yˆ,S†=?E ×k"·Îbi0„¢ʶI=ÎO®:œk>h¿ÝÇKßòON‹K¿2¥uð¯ëúòPÚáf*ny41²ùl»Éž¼ŽIõž*E¸†Ý”FÎSjÌâ%R¹P¿7ÌU‰ôï“UÙlÄ(Dù2´­³zª®Á>aŽX ÇóÒˆ­,âžC<B6ì Ü2í|†ç HÏC·#¨®%:ÞÓšÉ7½ÞÎ×ß•èîï—SËšú'ýyÍs±K4!Ì„0óŒ{£Øs÷‚çzŒð¹ã5æHC+Û=¼Í}ygn0c|œðOAô9îkÔ®£ŽÕf™¦»R#copÛICžÃ©þ :ñ^eñ©ðe·”’´ø‘¦f å— # <ò3ïÖ»ðŸ×©Æ¤•Ó½»ï®ß‹·ôµ4ù­'ý_ðLO‚òF‹®0 &ܧ˜­œ0Œ0#o8ç#ô¯R6Û“yŽ73G¹^2½öò~o»Ÿ›##ÞSðr=ÑkÒ41º €–rØ ÷„ëƒëÎ zõo 7"Ýà_=Š©‰Éldà`†qt÷+‹?æxù©%m,ö{.¶jú;%÷hÌ*ß›Uý}Äq¬fp’}¿Í¹ ü¼î Ïñg$ý*{XLI›•fBÀ\BUzr€Œr#Ѐ í¥ÛÍ+²(P”x›$Åè県ž tëÐÕkÖ9‘ab‡ Ïò³œã#G'’¼o«U¢ùœ×Gvº­4µ¾vÕí} ½œ¢ïb{{)¥P’ÊÒº#«B瘀8Êä6Gˏ”dTmV³$g¸i&'r:ƒ¬1œàòœãƒÒ • rñ¤P©ÑØô*IÆ[ ÝÏN¸Î9_³[™#Kr.Fí¤í*IÁ?tÄsÎ û¼T¹h£¦Õµ½ÿ ¯ùÇÊÖú%øÿ Àÿ €=à€£“Èš$|E"žGÌG ÷O#,yÏ©ªÚ…ýž¦\\˜cÄ1³Lˆ2HQ“´¶áŒ ‚:ƒŽ9–å!Š–͐‚ɾF''‘÷yÇNüûãëpÆ|=~¢D•䵕vn2„sÓžGLë IUP´Uíw®Ú-/mm£²×Ì–ìíeý] ? øÑüa¨ÞZÏeki,q‰c10PTpAÜÀg%zSß°2Ĥ¡U]®ØŠÜçžI;€èpx?_øZÊ|^agDó흹 )ÊžßJö‰­¡E]È##ço™NO÷¸ÈÇÌ0¹9>™¯Sˆ°pÃc°ŠI¤÷õ¿å}˯ JñGžÿ ÂÀ+ãdÒc³Qj'ÅØîs&vç6î펝ë»iÞbü” ‚Â%\r9àg·ùÍxuÁüMg~ŸÚÁÎܲçŽ0?*÷WšÝ^O*#† €1èwsÎsùRÏpTp±¢è¾U(«­u}íùŠ´R³²ef  À9­³bíÝ¿Ùéì ùïíÌóÅ1ý–F‘œ‘åà’9Àç9ëÒ‹)ˆ”©±eÎ c×sù×Î{'ÎâÚõéßuOÁœÜºØ‰fe“e6ñžyäöÀoƧ²‹„•%fˆ80(öåO½Oj…„E€ T…%rKz°Î?.;{šXÙ‡ŸeUÚd!üx9þtã%wO_øoòcM- j–ÒHX_iK#*) ž@Ž{ ôǽBd¹‰RÝn–ê0«7ˆìyÀ÷Í@¬Ì¢³³’ 9é÷½?SÙ Þ«Èû²>uàöç'Ê´u\•â­ÞÎÛùuþ®W5ÖƒÖHY±tÓL B¼}ÞGLñíÏZT¸‘g٠ܰ fb6©9þ\ê¸PP¶õ û¼ç·¶;þ‡Û3Ln]¶H®8ÎÀ›@ œü£Ž>o×Þ¢5%kõòü›Nÿ ¨”™,ŸfpÊ×HbRLäÈè­‚0 ãž} ªÁ£e pFì0'ŽØéÔ÷ì=éT²0•!…Îzt9ç¾?”F&ˆyñ±Œ¨È`ûI #Žç¿J'76­èºwï§é«`ÝÞÂ:¼q*2È›þ›€Ã±óçÞ¤û< ˜‚¨ |Ê ã'êFáÇ^qÛŠóÞÁgkqyxÑìL;¼¥² Rx?‡¯Y7PŽwnù¶†û¾Ü·.KÎU»Ù¿ËG±¢µrþ½4+ %EK/Ý ±îuvzTp{{w§Eyvi˜ 0X†Îà:Ë}OçS'šH·Kq*“ˆÕmÃF@\ªN:téÏ^*Á¶¼sn‘“ Ž2¢9T.½„\ ýò@>˜7NFïNRÓ·wèôßEÕua'¬[þ¾cö¡̐Oæ¦âÅŠ². Ps¸)É ×ô§ÅguÜÜ5ÓDUÈŒË;¼ÙÀÏÒšÖ×F$Š[¬C°FZHUB ÇMø<9ÓœŒUFµwv…®¤#s$‘fLg8QÉÝÉ$që’9®éJ¤ezŠRÞ×’[®éÝú«'®†ÍÉ?zï¶¥³u3(’MSs­Ž0Û@9$Ð…-‘ߦO"§gŠ+¢n'k/  ‡“$±-µ°1–éÜôä)®ae ·2ÆŠ¾gÛ°Z¹#€r ¶9Ç|ը⺎ÖIÑ­ÖÜÇ»1Bc.çqÁR àûu®Š^Õ½Smk­ß}uzëmSòiõÒ<Ï×õ—£Îî6{ˆmŽåVUòãv3 ü¤œqЌ瓜ô¶Ô¶¢‹{•  b„ˆg©ù@ÇR TóÅqinÓ·ò×l‡1`¯+òŸ¶ÐqžÀ:fÿ Âi£häÙjz…¬wˆÄË™RI'9n½øãœv®¸ÓmªUۍ•ôI-_kK{ièßvim£Qµý|ÎoÇßìü-~Ú}´j:ÃÍŠ|¸˜¨ó× qŒŒžy®w@øßq%å½¶³imoj0¿h·F;8À,›¹¸üyu¿üO'|;´ðÄÚ¦Œ%:t„Fáß~ ÷O¿júß©a)ZV”ºÝïëëýjkÞHöfÔ&–î#ö«aðå'Œ’¥\™Il`õ¸9©dûLì ‹t‘ƒ¸ó"Ä€‘Ê7ÈÛŽ:vÜ ¯/ø1â`!»Ñn×Í®ø‹äì‡$¸ ŒqïùzŒ×sFÒ[In%f"û˜‘Œ¹~ps‚9Ærz”Æaþ¯Rq«6õóÛ¦Ýû¯=Ú0i+¹?ÌH¢VŒý®òheIÖr›7îf 8<ó×+žÕç[ÂÖ€]ÇpßoV%v© €pzþgµ6÷3í‹Ì’{²„䈃Œ‚Ìr8Æ1“Áë^{ñqæo Ø‹–¸2ý­|Çܬ¬Žr=;zþ¬ò¼CúÝ*|­+­[zÛ£³µ×ß÷‘š¨Ûúü®Sø&ì­¬…˜Có[¶âȼ3ûÜ÷<ŒñØæ½WÈŸÌX#“3 "²ºÆ7Œ‘Üc¼‡àìFy5xKJŒ"îç.r@ï×Þ½Ä-ÿ þ“}ª}’*Þ!,Fm¸Î@†9b?1W{Yæ3„`Ú¼VõŠÚÛ_kùöG.mhÎñ ôíhí§Ô$.ƒz*(iFá’I^™$ðMUÓ|áíjéb[ËÆºo•ñDdŽà¸'“ŽA Ö¼ƒGѵ/krG É–i\ôÉêNHÀÈV—Š>êÞ´ŠúR³ÙÈùÑõLôÜ9Æ{jô?°°Kýš¥WíZ¿V—m6·E}{X~Æ? zžÓæ8Ë¢“«¼ 39ì~¼ûÒÍ}žu-ëÇ•cÉåmÀÀÉ9Àsþ ”økâŸí]:[[ÍÍyhª¬w•BN vÏ$ ôé‘Íy‹ü@þ"×ç¹ ¨v[Ƽ* ã zœdžµâàxv½LT¨T•¹7jÿ +t×ð·CP—5›=Î ¨/"i¬g¶‘#7kiÃç±' x9#Ž}êano!òKD‘ílï”('¿SÔð?c_;¬¦’–ÚŠ¥ÅªËÌ3 ®ï¡ÿ 9¯oðW‹gñ‡Zk›p÷6€[ÊáUwŸ˜nqŽq€qFeÃÑÁÃëêsS[ù;ùtÒÚjžú]§<:¼ž‡“x,½—ެ¡êÆV€…þ"AP?ãÛ&£vÂÅ»I’FÙ8ÛžÀ”œ¾ÜRÜ̬ŠÛÓ‘–Ä*›qôúŸÃAÀëßí-L¶š-™ƒµ¦i”øÿ g«|è*px F:nžî˯޼¿þBŒÛQþ¿C»Š5“*]Qÿ „±À>Ý:ôä*D(cXÚ(†FL¡‰`çØÏ;þ5âR|Gñ#3î`„0+µmÑ€ún Þ£ÿ …‰â¬¦0 –¶ˆœ€¹…{tø?ʯ(_çþ_Š5XY[¡Ù|Q¿ú µŠ2︛sO* Бÿ ×â°<+à›MkÂ÷š…ij ·Ü–ˆ«ò‚?ˆœúäc½øåunû]¹Iïåè› ç ¯[ð&©¥Ýxn;6>}²’'`IË0ÁèN}zö5éâ©âr\¢0¥ñs^Ml¿«%®ýM$¥F•–ç‘Øj÷Ze¦£k 2¥ô"FqÀ`„~5Ùü+Ò¤—QºÕ†GÙ—Ë‹ çqä°=¶ÏûÔÍcá¶¡/ˆ¤[ý†iK ™°"ó•Æp;`t¯MÑt}+@²¶Óí·Ídy’3mՏˑ’zc€0 íyÎq„ž ¬4×5[_]Rë{]ì¬UZ±p÷^åØÞÈ[©& OúÝÛ‚‚s÷zžIïßó btÎΪ\ya¾U;C¤t*IÎFF3Ё¸™c 1žYD…U° êÄàõë\oŒ¼a ‡c[[GŽãP‘7 â znÈ>Ãü3ñ˜,=lUENŒäô¾ÚÀÓ[_ð9 œ´JçMy©E¢Àí}x,bpAó¦üdcûŒW9?Å[Há$¿¹pÄ™#^9O88©zO=«Ë!µÖüY¨³ªÍy9ûÒ1 úôÚ»M?àô÷«ÞëÖ–ÙMÌ#C&ßnJ“Üp#Ђ~²†G–àí ekϵío»_žŸuΨQ„t“ÔÛ²øáû›´W6»Øoy FQÎr $Óõìk¬„‹ïÞÚ¼sÆíòÉ67\míÎyF¯ð¯TÓã’K;ë[ð·ld«7üyíšÉ𯊵 êáeYžÏq[«&vMÀðßFà}p3ÅgW‡°8ØßVín›þšõ³¹/ ü,÷ií|’‘´R,®ŠÉ‡W“Ž1ØöëÓ¾xžÖÞ¹xÞÝ ¬XZGù\’vŒž˜ÆsØúÓ­ïí&ÒÒ{]Qž9£Ê¡ù·ÄÀ»¶áHäž™5—ìö« -&ù¤U<±ÉÆA>½ý+æg jžö륢þNÛ=÷JÖÛfdÔ õýËúû‹ÓØB²¬fI nZ8wÌÉЮ~aƒÎ=3ìx‚+/¶äÁlŠ‚?™Æü#8-œ\pqTZXtè%»»&ÚÝ#´ŠðÜ žã§Í’¼{p·ß{m>ÞycP¨’¼¢0ú(Rƒë^Ž ñó¼(»y%m´ÕÙ}ÊûékB1¨þÑ®,#Q)ó‡o1T©ÜÃ*Ž‹‚yö< b‰4×H€“ìÐ. ¤²9ÌŠ>„Žãøgšñ ¯Š~)¸ßå\ÛÛoBŒa·L²œg$‚Iã¯ZÈ—Æ~%”äë—È8â)Œcƒ‘Âàu9¯b%)ÞS²¿Ïïÿ 4Öºù}Z/[H%¤vÉ#Ì’x§†b © ³´tÜ{gn=iï%õªÇç]ܧ—! åw„SÓp ·VÈÏ¡?5Âcâb¥_ĤŠz¬—nàþÖΟñKÄöJé=ÌWèêT‹¸÷qÎჟ•q’zWUN«N/ØO^Ÿe|í¾©k{üõ4öV^ïù~G¹êzÂèº|·÷×[’Þ31†rpjg·n Æ0Ý}kåË‹‰nîe¹ËÍ+™ÏVbrOç]'‰¼o®xÎh`¹Ç*±ÙÚ!T$d/$žN>¼WqᯅZ9ÑÒO\ÜÛê1o&,-z ~^NCgNÕéá)ÒÊ©7‰¨¯'Õþ¯þ_¿Ehîþóâ €ï¬uÛûý*ÎK9ä.â-öv<²‘×h$àãúW%ö¯~«g-ÕõÀàG~>Zú¾Iš+(šM³ Û#9äl%ðc¬ ûÝ xÖKG´x®|¸¤Ï™O:Ê8Ã’qÉcÔä‚yÇNJyËŒTj¥&µOmztjÿ ?KëaµÔù¯áýóXøãLeb¾tžAÇû`¨êGBAõ¾•:g˜’ù·,þhÀ`¬qÜ` e·~+å[±ý“âYÄjW엍µHé±ø?Nõô>½âX<5 Ç©ÏѼM¶8cܪXŽÉ^r?¼IróÈS•ZmÇ›™5»òÚÚ7ïu«&|·÷•Ά >[©ÞXHeS$Œyà€ ÷ù²:ò2|óãDf? Z¼PD¶ÓßC(xÆ0|©ßR;ôMsÿ µ´ÔVi¬,͹›Ìxâi˜`¹,GAéÇlV§ÄýF×Yø§ê–‘:Ã=ò2³9n±ÉžØÏ@yÎWžæ±Ãàe„ÄÒN ]ïòêìú_Go'¦ŽÑ’_×õЯðR66þ!›ÑÄ gFMÙ— äžäqôÈ;ÿ eX<#%»Aö‰ãR¤ Í”Ž¹È G&¹Ÿƒ&á?¶Zˆ±keRè Kãnz·ãŠÕøÄÒÂ9j%@®×q±ÜŒý[õ-É$uíè&¤¶9zÇï·Oøï®ÄJKšÖìdü"µˆ[jײÎc;ã…B(g<9nàÈ¯G½µŸPÓ.´Éfâ¼FŽP 31 ‘ÏR}<3šä~ Ã2xVöî Dr Ç\›}Ý#S÷ÈÀëŽHÆI®à\OçKuäI¹†ó(”—GWî ñ³¹¸æ2¨›‹ºÚû%¾ýÖ_3ºNú¯ëúì|ÕÅÖ‰}y lM’ZËîTÿ á[ðÐñ/ˆ9Àû ¸ón3 Mòd‘÷ döª^.Êñް›BâîNp>cëÏçÍzïíôÏ YÍ%ª¬·ãÏ-*9Ü­ÂãhéŒc¾dÈêú¼Ë,. VŠ÷çeÿ n/¡¼äãõâ=‹xGQKx”|¹bÌŠD@2Œ 8'Ž àúƒŽ+áDÒ&¡¨"Œ§–Žr22 Ç·s]ŸÄ‹«ð%ÚÄ<¹ä’(×{e›HÀqÁç©Ç½`üŽÚõK饚9ƒÄ±€< –úƒú~ çðñO#­Í%iKKlµ¦¾F)'Iê¬Î+Ç(`ñ¾£œdÈ’` ™ºcßéé^ÿ i¸”Û\ý¡æhÔB«aq¸}ãÀÆ:ÜWƒ|FÛÿ BŒÇÀeaŸ-sÊ€:úW½ÜÝÜ<%$µ†%CóDªÀí%IÈÏʤ…ôäñÞŒ÷‘a0“ôŽÚë¤nŸoW÷0«e¶y'Å»aΗ2r’# Û°A^ý9ÉQÔõ=ù5¬£Öü.(Þ’M$~V«=éSÄFN½®©ÔWô»ÿ þHžkR‹ìÏ+µµžöê;khÚI¤m¨‹Ôš–âÖçJ¾_Z•’6 a”Èô> ÕÉaÕ<%®£2n bQŠå\tÈõUÿ ø»þ‹k15‚ÃuCL$ݹp P1=Oøýs¯^u éEJ”–éêŸê½5ýzy›jÛ³á›Ûkÿ ÚOcn±ÛÏîW;boºz{ãžüVÆ¡a£a5½äÎÂks¸J@?1è¿{$䑐=k”øsÖ^nŒ¦)ÝåXÃíùN1ØõÚOJë–xF÷h¸ Œ"Ž?x䜚ü³ì¨c*Fœ¯i;7~ñí׫Ðó¥Ë»3Ãü púw ‰°<Á%»ñž ÿ P+Û^ ¾Ye£ŽCÄŒ„/>˜>•á¶Ìm~&&À>M[hÈÈÿ [Ž•íd…RO@3^Ç(ʽ*¶ÖQZyßþ 1Vº}Ñç?¼O4Rh6R€ª£í¡ûÙ a‚3ß·Õ ü=mRÍ/µ9¤‚0ÑC¼Iè:cŽsÛ¾™x£ÆÐ¬ªÍöˢ샒W$•€Å{¨ÀPG ÀÀàŸZìÍ1RÉ0´ðxEË9+Éÿ ^rEÕ—±Š„70l¼áË@û.' ¼¹Žz€N3úUÉ<3á×*?²¬‚ä†"Ùc=p íÛ'¡ª1ñ"økJ†HÒ'»Ÿ+ oÏN¬Ã9 dÙãÜדÏâÍ~æc+j·Jzâ7(£ðW]•晍?nê´º6åwéåç÷N•ZŠíž›¬|?Ðõ?Ñ-E…®³ÇV$~X¯/…õ x‘LˆÑÜÚÈ7¦pzãÜüë½ðÄ^õtÝYËÍ7ÉÖÕ8ÏUe# #€r=sU¾/é’E§jRC4mxNÝ´9†íuá»›V‘ ZI€­×cr1Ÿpzsøf»¨åV‹ìû`qËLÊIã?\~¼³áËC©êhªOîO»‘ÃmçÛçút×¢x“Z}?Üê#b-¤X7õ Äò gž zzbº3œm*qvs·M=íúéw}¿&Úª°^Ö×µÏ(ø‡â†Öµƒenñý†×åQáYûœ÷ÇLœôÎNk¡ð‡¼/µ¸n0æÉ0¬ƒ‚üîÉÆvŒw®Sáö”š¯‹-üÕVŠØÙ[$`(9cqƒÔ_@BëqûÙ`Ýæ­0;79È?w<ó |ÙÜkßÌ1±Ëã ¿ìÒ»ðlìï«ÓnªèèrP´NÏš&Žéö Ù¸÷æ°~-_O'‰`°!RÚÚÝ%]Ø%þbß1'¿ÿ X՝áOöÎŒ·‹¬+Åæ*ÛÛ™0¤ƒOÍÔ `u¯¦ÂaèÐÃÓ«‹¨Ô¥µœ¿¯ÉyÅÙ.oÔôŸ Úx&(STðݽ¦õ] ’ÒNóÁäÈùr3í·žÚ[™ƒ¼veÈ÷ÞIõÎGlqÎ=M|«gsªxÅI6 ]Z·Îªä,¨zŒŽÄ~#ØŠúFñiÉqc©éÐD>S딑 GñŽ1éÐ^+ Ëi;Ô„µVÕú»i¯ÈÒ-ZÍ]òܘ®ì` bÛÙ¥_/y(@÷qÐúg Ô÷W0.Ø› 6Ò© r>QƒŒ0+Èîzb¨É+I0TbNñ"$~)ÕÒ6Þ‹{0VÆ27œWWñcÄcX×íôûyKZéðªc'iQ¿¯LaWŠŸS\·Š“źʸ…ôÙÂí|öÀÇåV|!¤ÂGâÛ[[’ï 3OrÙËPY¹=Î1õ5öåTžÑè Ú64/üö?Zëžk}¬¶éào፾á}3“ü]8Éæ¿´n²Žš_6¾pœ)2?úWÓÚ¥¾¨iWúdŽq{*ª1rXŒd…m»‰äcô¯–dâ•ã‘Jº¬§¨#¨® §,df«8ÉÅßN¾hˆ;îÓ=7áùpën®É 6ûJžO2^œÐò JÖø¥²ã›Ò6Ü·‰!wbÍ‚¬O©»õ¬ÿ ƒP=Ä:â¤-&ÙŽ ` È9 r9íϧzë> XÅ7ƒ5X–krÑ¢L 7€ìw}ÑŸNHëŒüþ:2†á¼+u·á÷N/Û'Ðç~ߘô«ëh!ónRéeQ´6QÛÿ èEwëÅÒ|¸Yqó1uêyùzð8 ƒŠù¦Ò;¹ä6öi<'ü³„[íZhu½ ùÍ¡g‚>r¯׊îÌx}bñ2“­k꣧oø~›hTèóËWò4|ki"xßQ˜Ï6øÀLnß‚0 ¹Æ{±–¶Öe#¨27È@^Ìß.1N¾œyç€õ†ñeé·Õã†çQ°€=­Ì©ºB€Ø8<‚ÃSõ®ùcc>×Ú .Fr:žÝGæ=kÁâ,^!Fž ¬,àµ}%¶«îõ¹†"r²ƒGœüYÕd?aÑÍY®49PyU ÷þ!žxÅm|/‚ãNð˜¼PcûTÒ,¹/Ý=FkÏ|u¨¶«â녏{¤m¢]Û¾ïP>®XãÞ½iÓÁ¾ ‰'¬–6ß¼(„ï— í!úÙäzôë^–:œ¨å|,_¿&š×]uÓѵÛô4’j”bž§x‘Æ©ã›á,‚[Ô ÎÞ= ŒËæ ÀùYÁ?ŽïÚ¼?ÁªxºÕÛ,°1¸‘¿ÝäãØ¯v…@¤åq½ºã œàûââ·z8Xýˆþz~—û»™âµj=Ž â~ãáh@'h¼F#·Üp?ŸëQü-løvépx»cŸø…lxâÃûG·‰¶ø”L£©%y?¦úõÆü-Õ¶¥y`Òl7>q’2üA?•F}c‡jB:¸Jÿ +§¹¿¸Q÷°ív=VÑìu[Qml%R7a×IèTõéŽx¬ ?†š7 1†îã-ˆã’L¡lŽ0OÓ=ÅuˆpÇ•¼3ÛùÒ¶W/!|’wŽw^qÔ×Ïaó M8Q¨ãÑ?ëï0IEhÄa¸X•`a ?!ÐñùQ!Rä ÂžqŽžÝO`I0ÿ J“y|ñ!Îã@99>þ8–+éáu…!ù—ä ʰ<÷6’I®z ÅS„¾)Zþ_Öýµ×ËPåOwø÷þ*üïænÖùmØÝûþ¹=>¦½öî×Jh]¼ç&@§nTŒ6IT Àõ^Fxð7Å3!Ö·aÛ$þÿ ¹ã5îIo:ȪmËY[’8ÇӾlj*òû¢¥xõ¾¼ú•åk+\ð¯ HÚoŽl•Ûk,¯ ç²²cõÅ{²Z\ ´ìQ åpzŽ3Ôð}ÿ Jð¯XO¡øÎé€hÙ¥ûLdŒ`““ù6Gá^ÃáÝ^Ë[Ñb¾YåŒÊ»dŽ4 †2§,;ÿ CQÄ´¾°¨c–±”mºV{«ßÕýÄW\ÖŸ‘çŸ,çMRÆí“l-ƒn~ë©ÉÈê Ü?#Ž•¹ðãSÒ¥ÐWNíà½;ãž)™ÎSÈ9cóLj뵿Å«iÍk¨ió­¶X‚7÷ƒ€yãnyÏŽëÞ Öt`×À×V's$È9Ú:ä{wÆEk€«†Çàc—â$éÎ.éí~Ýëk}ÅAÆpörÑ¢‡Šl¡ÑüSs‹¨‰IÝ„óÀ×wñ&eºðf™pŒÆ9gŽTø£lñëÀçŽ NkÊUK0U’p ï^¡ãÈ¥´ø{£ÙHp`’ØåbqÏ©äó^Æ: Ž' ÊóM«õz+ß×ó5Ÿ»('¹­ð¦C„$˜Å¢_ºÈI?»^äã'ñêzž+ë€ñ-½»´}¡Ë*õ?.xÇ^1ŽMyǸ&“—L–îëöâ7…' bqéÎGé]˪â1$o²¸R8Ã`.q€}sÖ¾C9­8cêÆÞíïóòvÓòùœÕfÔÚéýu­èÖ·Ú Å‚_¤³ÜۺƑߝ”àרý:׃xPþÅÕî-/üØmnQìïGΊÙRqê=>¢½õnæ·r!—h`+’;ò3È<“Û©éšóŸx*÷V¹¸×tÈiˆßwiÔÿ |cŒñÏ®3Ö½̰‰Ë Qr©ö½®¼ÛoÑÙZÅÑ«O൯ýw8;k›ÿ x†;ˆJa;‘º9÷÷R+¡ñgŽí|Iáë{ôáo2ʲ9 029ÉÏLí\‰¿¸Ÿb˜ "Bv$£&#ßiê>=ªª©f  ’N ëí>¡N­XW­~5×úíø\‰»½Ï^ø(—wÖú¥¤2íŽÞXæÁ$ °eÈ888^nÝë²ñÝÔ^ ÖÚ9Q~Ëå7ï DC¶ÑµƒsËÇè9®Wáþƒ6‡£´·°2\Ý:ÈÑ?(#¨'$õèGJ¥ñW\ÿ ‰E¶—¸™g˜ÌÀ¹;Pv ú±ÎNs·ëŸ’–"Ž/:té+ûË]öJöÓM»ëø˜*‘•^Uý—êd|‰åñMæÔÝ‹23å™6æHùÛ‚ëüñ^…ñ1¢oêûÑEØ.õ7*ÅHtÎp{g<·Á«+¸c¿¿pÓ¾Æby=8É_ÄsÆk¬ñB\jÞÔì••Ë[9Píb‹Bヅ =9­3§ð§LšÛáÖšÆæXÌÞdÛP.0\ãïÛ0?™úJ¸™Ë ”•œº+=<µI£¦í¯õêt¬d‹T¬P=ËFêT>ÍØØ@Ï9<÷AQÌ×»Õ¡xùk",JÎæù±Éç$œŽŸZWH®¯"·UÌQ ’ÙÈ]ÅXg<ã ߨg3-Üqe€0¢¨*Œ$܃ ’Sû 8㎼_/e'+Ï–-èÓ¶¶Õíß[·ÙÙ½î쏗¼sk%§µxä‰â-pÒeÆCrú ôσžû=”šÅô(QW‚Õd\ƒæ. \àö¹¯F½°³½0M>‘gr÷q+œ¶NïºHO— ¤ ܥݭ”n·J|ÆP6Kµc=Isó}Ò çGš)a=—#vK›åoK§ßóٍ¤¶¿õú…ÄRÚ[Ësöټˏ•Ë ópw®qœŒ·Ø ùÇâ‹ý‡ãKèS&ÞvûD Aù‘É9 ŒîqÅ} $SnIV[]ѐ´Ó}ØÜ¾A Ü|½kÅþÓ|E Mu R¼.I¼¶däò‚ÃkÆ}ðy¹vc iUœZ…­Õõ»z¾÷¿n¦*j-É­/àœHã\y5 Û ß™ó0— äŸnzôã#Ô¯,†¥ÚeÔ÷ÜÅ´„“'c…<íÝ€<·SŠ¥k§Ã¢éÆÆÙna‚8–=«ʪ[Ÿ™°pNî02z“ÔÙ–K8.È’Þî(vƒ2®@ äÈûãçžxäÇf¯ˆu¹yUÕîýWšÙ|›ëÒ%Q^í[æ|éo5ZY•^{96ˆY‚§v*x>âº_|U¹Ö´©tûMÒÂ9PÇ#«£#€ éÉñ‘ƒÍz/‰´-į¹°dd,Б›p03ƒœ{ç9=+ Ûᧇ¬¦[‡‚ê婺¸#±ß=³ý¿•Õµjñ½HÙh›Û[§ÚýÊöô÷{˜?ô÷·Ô.u©–_%còcAÀ˜’ }0x9Î>žñÇáÍ9,ahï¦Ì2òÓ ñÛAäry$V²Nð ]=$Ž ‚#Ù‚1ƒƒødõMax‡ÂÖ^!±KkÛ‘ «“Çó²FN8+ëÎ{Ò¼oí§[«ÕMRoËeç×[_m/¦¦k.kôgŽxsSÓ´ý`êzªÜÜKo‰cPC9ÎY‰#§^üý9¹âïÞx£Ë·Ú`±‰‹¤;³–=ÏaôÕAð‚÷kêÁNBéÎælcõö®£Fð†ô2Ò¬]ßÂK$ÓÜ®•”/ÊHàã$ä ¸÷ëf¹Oµúâ“”’²ø­è´µþöjçNü÷üÌ¿ xNïFÒd»¼·h®îT9ŽAµÖ>qÁçÔœtïÒ»\ȶÎîcÞäîó3¶@#ÉIÎ ÔñW.<´’¥–ÑÑ€ÕšA‚ ;†qÓë‚2q ÒÂó$# Çí‡ !Ë}Õ9ÈÎÑÉã=;ŒÇÎuñ+ÉûÏ¥öíeÙ+$úíÜ娯'+êZH4ƒq¶FV‹gïŒ208ÆÌ)íб>M|÷âÍã¾"iì‹¥£Jd´™OÝç;sÈúr+ÜäˆË)DŒ¥šF°*3Õ”d {zÔwºQ¿·UžÉf†~>I+ŒqÔ`ð3œ“Ü×f]œTÁÔn4“ƒø’Ýßõ_«*5šzGCÊ,þ+ê1ò÷O¶¸cœºb2yÇ;cùÕ£ñh¬›áÑŠr¤ÝäNBk¥—á—†gxšX/쑘hŸ*Tçn =û㦠2|(ð¿e·ºÖ$ ýìŸ!'åΰyîî+×öœ=Y:²¦ÓÞ×iü’—ü -BK™£˜›âÆ¡&véðõ-ûÉY¹=Onj¹ø¯¯yf4·±T Pó`çœ7={×mÃ/ ¢˜ZÚòK…G½¥b„’G AãÜœ*í¯Ã¿ IoæI¦NU8‘RwÈã;·€ Û×ëÒ”1Y •£E»ÿ Oyto¢<£Áö·šï,䉧ûA¼sû»Nò}¹üE{ÜÖªò1’õÞr0â}ÎØ#>à/8ïéÎ~—áÍ#ñÎlí§³2f'h”?C÷YËdð:qëõÓ·‚ïeÄ© ÔÈØÜRL+žAÎ3¼g=åšó³Œt3 ÑQ¦ùRÙßE®¼±w_;þhš’Sirÿ ^ˆã¼iੇ|RòO„m°J/“$·l“ ÇÓ¿ÿ [ÑŠÆ“„†Õø>cFÆ6Ø1ƒ– àz7Ldòxäüwá‹ÝAXùO•Úý’é®ähm­ •NÀ±ÌTÈç ƒ‘I$pGž:‚ÄbêW¢®œ´|­¦­nÍ>¶ÖÏ¢§ÎÜ¢ºö¹•%ÄqL^öÛ KpNA<ã¡ …î==ª¸óffËF‡yÌcÉ ©ç$ð=ñÏ­YþÊ’Ú]—¥‚¬‚eDïÎH>Ÿ_ÌTP™a‰ch['çÆÜò7a‡?w°Ïn§âÎ5”’¨¹uÚÛ|´ÓÓc§{O—ü1•ªxsÃZ…ÊÏy¡Ã3¸Ë2Èé» ‘ƒÎ äžÜðA§cáOéúÛ4ý5-fŒï„ù¬ûô.Ç Üsž•Ò¾•wo<¶Ÿ"¬¡º|£ î2sÇ¡éE²ÉFѱrU°dÜ6œ¨ mc†Îxë׺Þ'0²¡Rr„{j¾í·è›µ÷)º·å–‹î2|I®Y¼ºÍË·–ÃÆà㍣'óÆxƒOÆÞ&>\lóÌxP Xc¸ì Sþ5§qà/ê>#žÞW¸if$\3 ® ûÄ“ùŽÕê¾ð<Ó‹H¶óÏ" å·( á‘€:ã†8Ï=+ꨬUA×ÃËÚT’ÑÞöù¥¢]{»ms¥F0\ÑÕ—ô}&ÛB´ƒOŽÚ+›xíÄÀ1 ,v± žIëíZ0ǧ™3 í2®0ทp9öÝÔž)ÓZËoq/Ú“‘L ²ŒmùŽÓ9§[Û#Ä‘\ÞB¬Çs [;à à«g‚2ôòªœÝV§»·¯/[uó½õÛï¾ /šÍ}öüÿ «=x»HŸÂÞ.™ ÌQùŸh´‘#a$‚'¡u<Š›Æ>2>+ƒLSiöwµFó1!eg`£åœ ÷ëÛö}Á¿ÛVÙêv $¬ƒ|,s÷z€ð΃¨x÷ÅD\ÜŒÞmåÔ„ ˆ o| :{ÇÓ¶–òÁn!´0Ål€, ƒ ( ÛŒŒ c¶rsšæ,4‹MÛOH!@¢ ÇŽ„`å²9ÝÃw;AÍt0®¤¡…¯ØÄ.Àì클ƒ‘ßñ5Í,Óëu-ÈÔc¢KÃÓ£òÖ̺U.õL¯0…%2È—"~x ‚[`có±nHàŽyàö™¥keˆìŒÛFç{(Ø©†`Jã#Žwg<“:ÚÉ;M ^\yhûX‡vB·÷zrF?§BÊÔ/s<ÐÈB)Û± ·ÍÔwç5Âã:så§e{mѤï«Òíh—]Wm4âí¿ùþW4bC3¶ª¾Ùr$ pw`àädzt!yŠI„hÂîàM)!edŒm'æ>Ç?wzºK­ìcŒ´¯Ìq6fp$)ãw¡éUl`µ»ARAˆÝÕgr:äŒgƒéé[Ôö±”iYs5Ýï«ÙG—K=þF’æMG«óÿ `ŠKɦuOQ!ÕåŒ/ÎGÞ`@ËqÕzdõâ«Ê/Ö(ƒK´%ŽbMü åÜŸö—>¤óŒŒV‘°„I¢Yž#™¥ùÏÊ@8 œgqöö5ª4vד[¬(q cò¨À!FGaÁõõ¯?§†¥ÏU½í¿WªZ$úyú½Žz×§Éþ?>Ã×È•6°{™™ŽÙ.$`­ÎUœ…çè ' ¤r$1Ø(y7 ðV<ž:È  ÁÎMw¾Â'Øb§øxb7gãО½óÉÊë²,i„Fȹ£§8ãä½k¹¥¦ê/ç{ïê驪2œ/«ü?¯Ô›ìñÜ$þeýœRIåŒg9Ác’zrrNO bÚi¢ ѺË/$,“ª¯Ýä;Œ× ´<ÛÑn³IvŸb™¥ nm–ÄŸ—nÝÀãŽ3ëÍG,.öó³˜Ù£¹u ÊÌrŠ[<±!@Æ:c9ÅZh ì’M5ÄìÌ-‚¼ëÉùqŽGì9¬á ;¨A-ž—évþÖ–^ON·Ô”ŸEý}ú×PO&e[]ÒG¸˜Ûp ƒÃà/Ë·8ûÀ€1ž@¿ÚB*²­¼ñì8@p™8Q“žÆH'8«I-%¸‚ F»“åó6°Uù|¶Ú¸ã ò^Äw¥ŠÖK–1ÜÝK,Žddlí²0PÀü“×ükG…¯U«·¶–´w¶ŽÍ¾©yÞú[Zös•¯Á[™6° ¨¼ÉVæq·,# ìãï‘×8îry®A››¨,ãc66»Ë´ã'æÉù?t}¢æH--Òá"›|ˆ¬[í  7¶ö#¸9«––‹$,+Ëqœ\Êø c€yê^ݸÄa°«™B-9%«×®‹V´w~vÜTéꢷþ¼ˆ%·¹• ’[xç•÷2gØS?6åÀÚ õ9É#š@÷bT¸º²C*3Bá¤òÎA9 =úU§Ó"2Ãlá0iÝIc‚2Î@%öç94ùô»'»HÄ¥Ô¾@à Tp£šíx:úÊ:5eºßMý×wµ›Ó_+šº3Ýyvÿ "ºÇ<ÂI>Õ 1G·Ë«È«É# àÈÇ øp Jv·šæDûE¿›†Ë’NFr2qŸ½ÇAÜšu•´éí#Ħ8£2”Ú2Ã/€[ÎTr;qŠz*ý’Îþ(≠;¡TÆâ›;ºÿ àçœk‘Þ­8¾Uª¾íé{^×IZéwÓkXÉûÑZo¯_øo×È¡¬ â–ÞR§2„‚Àœü½ùç® SVa†Âüª¼±D‘ŒísŸàä|ä2 æ[‹z”¯s{wn„ÆmáóCO+†GO8Ïeçåº`¯^¼ðG5f{Xžä,k‰<á y™¥voÆ éÛõëI=œ1‹éíÔÀÑ)R#;AÂncäŽ:tÏ#¶TkB.0Œ-ÖÞZÛgumß}fÎJÉ+#2êÔP£žùÈÅi¢%œ3P*Yƒò‚Aì“Ž2r:ƒÐúñi­RUQq‰H9!”={~¼ “JŽV¥»×²m.ÛߺiYl¾òk˜gL³·rT• ’…wHÁ6ä`–Î3ùÌ4Øe³†&òL‘•%clyîAÂäà0 žüç$[3uŘpNOÀÉ=† cï{rYK ååä~FÁ •a»"Lär1Ó¯2Äõæ<™C•.fÕ»è¥~½-¿g½Â4¡{[ør¨¶·Žõäx¥’l®qpwÇ»8ärF \cޏܯÓ-g‚yciÏÀ¾rÎwèØÈ#o°Á9ã5¢šfÔxÞæfGusÏÌJÿ µ×œ/LtãÅT7²¶w,l ɳ;”eúà·¨çîŒsÜgTÃS¦­^ '~‹®›¯+k÷ZÖd©Æ*Ó[Ü«%Œk0ŽXƒ”$k#Ȩ P2bv‘ƒŸáÇ™ÆÕb)m$É*8óLE‘8'–ÜN Úyàúô­+{uº±I'wvš4fÜr íì½=úuú sFlìV$‘ö†Hсù€$§ õ=½¸«Ž] :Ž+•¦ïmRþ½l´îÊT#nkiøÿ _ðÆT¶7Ò½ºÒ£Î¸d\ã8=yãŽÜäR{x]ZâÚé#¸r²#»ÎHÆ6õ ç® ÎFkr;sºÄ.&;só± Ç9êH÷ýSšÕ­tÐU¢-n­ Ì| vqœ„{gŒt§S.P‹’މ_[;m¥Þ­ZýRûÂX{+¥úü¼ú•-àÓ7!„G"“´‹žƒnrYXã¸îp éœ!Ó­oP̏tÑ (‰Þ¹é€sÓ#GLçÕšÑnJý¡!‘Tä#“ß?îýp}xÇ‚I¥Õn#·¸–y'qó@r[ Êô÷<ÔWÃÓ¢áN¥4ԝ’I&ݼ¬¬¼ÞºvéÆ FQV~_ÒüJÖÚt¥¦Xá3BÄP^%ÈÎW-×c¡ú©¤·Iþèk¥š?–UQåIR[’O 5x\ÉhÆI¶K4«2ùªŠŒ<¼óœçØ`u«‚Í.VHä € Ëgfx''9ÆI#±®Z8 sISºku¢ßÞ]úk»Jößl¡B.Ü»ÿ MWe °·Ž%šêɆ¼»Âù³´œ O¿cÐÓÄh©"ÛÜÏ.ÖV ’3nüÄmnq[ŒòznšÖ>J¬òˆæ…qýØP Ž:ä7^0yëWšÍ_79äoaÈ °#q0{ää×mœy”R{vÒÞ¶ÚÏe¥“ÚÆÐ¥Ì®—õýjR •íç›Ìb„+J yÜØÙ•Ç]¿Ôd þËOL²”9-Œ—õÃc'æÝלçÚ²ìejP“½ âù°¨†ðqòädЃÉäÖÜj÷PÇp“ÍšŠå«‘î <iWN­smª»¶vÓz5»ûì:Rs\Ðßôû×uÔÿÙ