Ugly Horizontal Lines Displayed in Kate and Konsole with Fractional HiDPI Scaling












7















Here is a picture of the problem:



enter image description here



Notice that all lines of text have horizontal lines similar to underlining. However, this is a plain text editor (Kate) and it does not do underlining. There is no formatting applied to this text.



I selected the text so the lines would show up better in a photo. But the lines exist even without selecting the text. Sometimes they are much thicker and darker. Sometimes they are light. Sometimes they won't be there at all, only to come back at random.



Konsole has the same issue. With white text on a black background, Konsole sometimes show multi-colored horizontal lines. Sometimes every line in Konsole has this ugly and distracting underlining. Sometimes only a portion of the lines have it.



Sometimes the lines are so dense and overwhelming that it is hard to read the text. Other times the lines are mild, as in the attached photograph.



I first saw this issue about a ten months ago on a desktop computer. I thought the user had just done something really crazy in font settings. But now I am seeing the issue on a new laptop without any significant settings changes from default.



Both systems run a fully updated Arch Linux KDE. On this laptop, I reset all font settings (in System Settings) to default values. I also reset the Konsole profile appearance to default settings (even though settings were already at default values).



However, the horizontal lines will not go away.



The applications work correctly (other than sometimes being hard to read text). Copied text does not include the horizontal lines. Commands in Konsole are not affected by the appearance of horizontal lines. It seems to be a display glitch, but it is not specific to any GPU (affects Intel or nvidia) or to any display screen (I tested different monitors on the desktop) or to anything else I can determine.



I tried various fixes on the affected desktop over the last ten months and I have not resolved it on that machine either.



I have multiple other Arch KDE computers that do not have the problem.



Does anyone have a clue as to what might cause this? Has else anyone seen it?



Edit: Please see the KDE bug report for Konsole:
373232 – Horizontal lines with fractional HiDPI scaling










share|improve this question





























    7















    Here is a picture of the problem:



    enter image description here



    Notice that all lines of text have horizontal lines similar to underlining. However, this is a plain text editor (Kate) and it does not do underlining. There is no formatting applied to this text.



    I selected the text so the lines would show up better in a photo. But the lines exist even without selecting the text. Sometimes they are much thicker and darker. Sometimes they are light. Sometimes they won't be there at all, only to come back at random.



    Konsole has the same issue. With white text on a black background, Konsole sometimes show multi-colored horizontal lines. Sometimes every line in Konsole has this ugly and distracting underlining. Sometimes only a portion of the lines have it.



    Sometimes the lines are so dense and overwhelming that it is hard to read the text. Other times the lines are mild, as in the attached photograph.



    I first saw this issue about a ten months ago on a desktop computer. I thought the user had just done something really crazy in font settings. But now I am seeing the issue on a new laptop without any significant settings changes from default.



    Both systems run a fully updated Arch Linux KDE. On this laptop, I reset all font settings (in System Settings) to default values. I also reset the Konsole profile appearance to default settings (even though settings were already at default values).



    However, the horizontal lines will not go away.



    The applications work correctly (other than sometimes being hard to read text). Copied text does not include the horizontal lines. Commands in Konsole are not affected by the appearance of horizontal lines. It seems to be a display glitch, but it is not specific to any GPU (affects Intel or nvidia) or to any display screen (I tested different monitors on the desktop) or to anything else I can determine.



    I tried various fixes on the affected desktop over the last ten months and I have not resolved it on that machine either.



    I have multiple other Arch KDE computers that do not have the problem.



    Does anyone have a clue as to what might cause this? Has else anyone seen it?



    Edit: Please see the KDE bug report for Konsole:
    373232 – Horizontal lines with fractional HiDPI scaling










    share|improve this question



























      7












      7








      7


      3






      Here is a picture of the problem:



      enter image description here



      Notice that all lines of text have horizontal lines similar to underlining. However, this is a plain text editor (Kate) and it does not do underlining. There is no formatting applied to this text.



      I selected the text so the lines would show up better in a photo. But the lines exist even without selecting the text. Sometimes they are much thicker and darker. Sometimes they are light. Sometimes they won't be there at all, only to come back at random.



      Konsole has the same issue. With white text on a black background, Konsole sometimes show multi-colored horizontal lines. Sometimes every line in Konsole has this ugly and distracting underlining. Sometimes only a portion of the lines have it.



      Sometimes the lines are so dense and overwhelming that it is hard to read the text. Other times the lines are mild, as in the attached photograph.



      I first saw this issue about a ten months ago on a desktop computer. I thought the user had just done something really crazy in font settings. But now I am seeing the issue on a new laptop without any significant settings changes from default.



      Both systems run a fully updated Arch Linux KDE. On this laptop, I reset all font settings (in System Settings) to default values. I also reset the Konsole profile appearance to default settings (even though settings were already at default values).



      However, the horizontal lines will not go away.



      The applications work correctly (other than sometimes being hard to read text). Copied text does not include the horizontal lines. Commands in Konsole are not affected by the appearance of horizontal lines. It seems to be a display glitch, but it is not specific to any GPU (affects Intel or nvidia) or to any display screen (I tested different monitors on the desktop) or to anything else I can determine.



      I tried various fixes on the affected desktop over the last ten months and I have not resolved it on that machine either.



      I have multiple other Arch KDE computers that do not have the problem.



      Does anyone have a clue as to what might cause this? Has else anyone seen it?



      Edit: Please see the KDE bug report for Konsole:
      373232 – Horizontal lines with fractional HiDPI scaling










      share|improve this question
















      Here is a picture of the problem:



      enter image description here



      Notice that all lines of text have horizontal lines similar to underlining. However, this is a plain text editor (Kate) and it does not do underlining. There is no formatting applied to this text.



      I selected the text so the lines would show up better in a photo. But the lines exist even without selecting the text. Sometimes they are much thicker and darker. Sometimes they are light. Sometimes they won't be there at all, only to come back at random.



      Konsole has the same issue. With white text on a black background, Konsole sometimes show multi-colored horizontal lines. Sometimes every line in Konsole has this ugly and distracting underlining. Sometimes only a portion of the lines have it.



      Sometimes the lines are so dense and overwhelming that it is hard to read the text. Other times the lines are mild, as in the attached photograph.



      I first saw this issue about a ten months ago on a desktop computer. I thought the user had just done something really crazy in font settings. But now I am seeing the issue on a new laptop without any significant settings changes from default.



      Both systems run a fully updated Arch Linux KDE. On this laptop, I reset all font settings (in System Settings) to default values. I also reset the Konsole profile appearance to default settings (even though settings were already at default values).



      However, the horizontal lines will not go away.



      The applications work correctly (other than sometimes being hard to read text). Copied text does not include the horizontal lines. Commands in Konsole are not affected by the appearance of horizontal lines. It seems to be a display glitch, but it is not specific to any GPU (affects Intel or nvidia) or to any display screen (I tested different monitors on the desktop) or to anything else I can determine.



      I tried various fixes on the affected desktop over the last ten months and I have not resolved it on that machine either.



      I have multiple other Arch KDE computers that do not have the problem.



      Does anyone have a clue as to what might cause this? Has else anyone seen it?



      Edit: Please see the KDE bug report for Konsole:
      373232 – Horizontal lines with fractional HiDPI scaling







      kde konsole plasma5 kate






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Sep 25 '18 at 19:10









      BugBuddy

      1478




      1478










      asked Jan 4 '18 at 19:24









      MountainXMountainX

      5,0532672131




      5,0532672131






















          4 Answers
          4






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          6














          This is reported to have been resolved in QTBUG-66036 with version 5.12. As of the time I am writing this, QT on Arch Linux is version 5.11.2-1. Other common distros have also not released packages with Qt 5.12. However, when Qt 5.12 is released, the developers expect this issue to be resolved.



          To check your Qt version, you can open a terminal and type:



          qmake --version


          The output will look similar to this



          QMake version 3.1
          Using Qt version 5.11.1 in /usr/lib


          When you see Qt version 5.12, then you can expect a resolution. If not, let the developers know at QTBUG-66036.



          In the mean time, there is a work-around, as described in the bug report below



          Steps to reproduce:




          1. Displays -> Scale -> Scale Factor: 1.3 (or 1.4, etc.)

          2. Restart

          3. Open Konsole or Kate, type stuff


          Workaround: set Scale Factor back to 1.0 (or to an integer such as 2 or 3).



          There is a similar bug report for Konsole here



          373232 – Horizontal lines with fractional HiDPI scaling
          https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=373232






          share|improve this answer





















          • 2





            that workaround is absurd on 4k+ btw

            – tomasb
            Jun 6 '18 at 12:34











          • Yes, I agree that the workaround is terrible. Looking forward to a proper fix.

            – BugBuddy
            Jul 9 '18 at 7:48











          • found that integer factors work well (e.g. 2.0, 3.0, ...)

            – tomasb
            Jul 9 '18 at 16:38











          • please add a comment to the bug report: bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=373232

            – MountainX
            Jul 10 '18 at 17:18






          • 1





            @tomasb - If you want this fixed, please consider creating a login so you can let the developers know it affects you. If you are too lazy to do even that, you have no right to complain about the workaround (or anything else) being "absurd". If you use open source, please find ways to contribute, even if by only voting or commenting on bug reports -- anything. Be part of the community.

            – BugBuddy
            Sep 25 '18 at 18:48



















          0














          As a workaround, you could change the Fonts DPI:




          1. go to Fonts, check the box Force Fonts DPI

          2. set to an appropriate value (I use 144 on a 2560x1440 screen, you may want to try 192 in 4K)


            • Higher DPI translate to bigger text in your screen



          3. Set the your display scaling factor back to 1

          4. Logout and login to your user (or restart)


          At this point the horizontal lines should be gone and you should be able to read everything on your screen






          share|improve this answer































            0














            Another workaround is setting line interval to 1 in profile settings. It's almost unnoticeable, but fixes the issue.






            share|improve this answer
























            • We expect answers to be stand-alone and self-sufficient.  People should be able to understand your answer without needing to read the other answers.  What profile settings?  Where does the user set them, and how? … Please do not respond in comments; edit your answer to make it clearer and more complete.

              – G-Man
              Dec 5 '18 at 16:20





















            0














            Upgrading to Qt 5.12 is fine, but does not seem to fix the issue straight away. In Konsole profile settings under the advanced tab, change "Line Spacing" to 1. This has fixed the issue with horizontal lines for me.






            share|improve this answer























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              4 Answers
              4






              active

              oldest

              votes








              4 Answers
              4






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes









              6














              This is reported to have been resolved in QTBUG-66036 with version 5.12. As of the time I am writing this, QT on Arch Linux is version 5.11.2-1. Other common distros have also not released packages with Qt 5.12. However, when Qt 5.12 is released, the developers expect this issue to be resolved.



              To check your Qt version, you can open a terminal and type:



              qmake --version


              The output will look similar to this



              QMake version 3.1
              Using Qt version 5.11.1 in /usr/lib


              When you see Qt version 5.12, then you can expect a resolution. If not, let the developers know at QTBUG-66036.



              In the mean time, there is a work-around, as described in the bug report below



              Steps to reproduce:




              1. Displays -> Scale -> Scale Factor: 1.3 (or 1.4, etc.)

              2. Restart

              3. Open Konsole or Kate, type stuff


              Workaround: set Scale Factor back to 1.0 (or to an integer such as 2 or 3).



              There is a similar bug report for Konsole here



              373232 – Horizontal lines with fractional HiDPI scaling
              https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=373232






              share|improve this answer





















              • 2





                that workaround is absurd on 4k+ btw

                – tomasb
                Jun 6 '18 at 12:34











              • Yes, I agree that the workaround is terrible. Looking forward to a proper fix.

                – BugBuddy
                Jul 9 '18 at 7:48











              • found that integer factors work well (e.g. 2.0, 3.0, ...)

                – tomasb
                Jul 9 '18 at 16:38











              • please add a comment to the bug report: bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=373232

                – MountainX
                Jul 10 '18 at 17:18






              • 1





                @tomasb - If you want this fixed, please consider creating a login so you can let the developers know it affects you. If you are too lazy to do even that, you have no right to complain about the workaround (or anything else) being "absurd". If you use open source, please find ways to contribute, even if by only voting or commenting on bug reports -- anything. Be part of the community.

                – BugBuddy
                Sep 25 '18 at 18:48
















              6














              This is reported to have been resolved in QTBUG-66036 with version 5.12. As of the time I am writing this, QT on Arch Linux is version 5.11.2-1. Other common distros have also not released packages with Qt 5.12. However, when Qt 5.12 is released, the developers expect this issue to be resolved.



              To check your Qt version, you can open a terminal and type:



              qmake --version


              The output will look similar to this



              QMake version 3.1
              Using Qt version 5.11.1 in /usr/lib


              When you see Qt version 5.12, then you can expect a resolution. If not, let the developers know at QTBUG-66036.



              In the mean time, there is a work-around, as described in the bug report below



              Steps to reproduce:




              1. Displays -> Scale -> Scale Factor: 1.3 (or 1.4, etc.)

              2. Restart

              3. Open Konsole or Kate, type stuff


              Workaround: set Scale Factor back to 1.0 (or to an integer such as 2 or 3).



              There is a similar bug report for Konsole here



              373232 – Horizontal lines with fractional HiDPI scaling
              https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=373232






              share|improve this answer





















              • 2





                that workaround is absurd on 4k+ btw

                – tomasb
                Jun 6 '18 at 12:34











              • Yes, I agree that the workaround is terrible. Looking forward to a proper fix.

                – BugBuddy
                Jul 9 '18 at 7:48











              • found that integer factors work well (e.g. 2.0, 3.0, ...)

                – tomasb
                Jul 9 '18 at 16:38











              • please add a comment to the bug report: bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=373232

                – MountainX
                Jul 10 '18 at 17:18






              • 1





                @tomasb - If you want this fixed, please consider creating a login so you can let the developers know it affects you. If you are too lazy to do even that, you have no right to complain about the workaround (or anything else) being "absurd". If you use open source, please find ways to contribute, even if by only voting or commenting on bug reports -- anything. Be part of the community.

                – BugBuddy
                Sep 25 '18 at 18:48














              6












              6








              6







              This is reported to have been resolved in QTBUG-66036 with version 5.12. As of the time I am writing this, QT on Arch Linux is version 5.11.2-1. Other common distros have also not released packages with Qt 5.12. However, when Qt 5.12 is released, the developers expect this issue to be resolved.



              To check your Qt version, you can open a terminal and type:



              qmake --version


              The output will look similar to this



              QMake version 3.1
              Using Qt version 5.11.1 in /usr/lib


              When you see Qt version 5.12, then you can expect a resolution. If not, let the developers know at QTBUG-66036.



              In the mean time, there is a work-around, as described in the bug report below



              Steps to reproduce:




              1. Displays -> Scale -> Scale Factor: 1.3 (or 1.4, etc.)

              2. Restart

              3. Open Konsole or Kate, type stuff


              Workaround: set Scale Factor back to 1.0 (or to an integer such as 2 or 3).



              There is a similar bug report for Konsole here



              373232 – Horizontal lines with fractional HiDPI scaling
              https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=373232






              share|improve this answer















              This is reported to have been resolved in QTBUG-66036 with version 5.12. As of the time I am writing this, QT on Arch Linux is version 5.11.2-1. Other common distros have also not released packages with Qt 5.12. However, when Qt 5.12 is released, the developers expect this issue to be resolved.



              To check your Qt version, you can open a terminal and type:



              qmake --version


              The output will look similar to this



              QMake version 3.1
              Using Qt version 5.11.1 in /usr/lib


              When you see Qt version 5.12, then you can expect a resolution. If not, let the developers know at QTBUG-66036.



              In the mean time, there is a work-around, as described in the bug report below



              Steps to reproduce:




              1. Displays -> Scale -> Scale Factor: 1.3 (or 1.4, etc.)

              2. Restart

              3. Open Konsole or Kate, type stuff


              Workaround: set Scale Factor back to 1.0 (or to an integer such as 2 or 3).



              There is a similar bug report for Konsole here



              373232 – Horizontal lines with fractional HiDPI scaling
              https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=373232







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited Sep 25 '18 at 19:14









              MountainX

              5,0532672131




              5,0532672131










              answered Jan 5 '18 at 0:25









              BugBuddyBugBuddy

              1478




              1478








              • 2





                that workaround is absurd on 4k+ btw

                – tomasb
                Jun 6 '18 at 12:34











              • Yes, I agree that the workaround is terrible. Looking forward to a proper fix.

                – BugBuddy
                Jul 9 '18 at 7:48











              • found that integer factors work well (e.g. 2.0, 3.0, ...)

                – tomasb
                Jul 9 '18 at 16:38











              • please add a comment to the bug report: bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=373232

                – MountainX
                Jul 10 '18 at 17:18






              • 1





                @tomasb - If you want this fixed, please consider creating a login so you can let the developers know it affects you. If you are too lazy to do even that, you have no right to complain about the workaround (or anything else) being "absurd". If you use open source, please find ways to contribute, even if by only voting or commenting on bug reports -- anything. Be part of the community.

                – BugBuddy
                Sep 25 '18 at 18:48














              • 2





                that workaround is absurd on 4k+ btw

                – tomasb
                Jun 6 '18 at 12:34











              • Yes, I agree that the workaround is terrible. Looking forward to a proper fix.

                – BugBuddy
                Jul 9 '18 at 7:48











              • found that integer factors work well (e.g. 2.0, 3.0, ...)

                – tomasb
                Jul 9 '18 at 16:38











              • please add a comment to the bug report: bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=373232

                – MountainX
                Jul 10 '18 at 17:18






              • 1





                @tomasb - If you want this fixed, please consider creating a login so you can let the developers know it affects you. If you are too lazy to do even that, you have no right to complain about the workaround (or anything else) being "absurd". If you use open source, please find ways to contribute, even if by only voting or commenting on bug reports -- anything. Be part of the community.

                – BugBuddy
                Sep 25 '18 at 18:48








              2




              2





              that workaround is absurd on 4k+ btw

              – tomasb
              Jun 6 '18 at 12:34





              that workaround is absurd on 4k+ btw

              – tomasb
              Jun 6 '18 at 12:34













              Yes, I agree that the workaround is terrible. Looking forward to a proper fix.

              – BugBuddy
              Jul 9 '18 at 7:48





              Yes, I agree that the workaround is terrible. Looking forward to a proper fix.

              – BugBuddy
              Jul 9 '18 at 7:48













              found that integer factors work well (e.g. 2.0, 3.0, ...)

              – tomasb
              Jul 9 '18 at 16:38





              found that integer factors work well (e.g. 2.0, 3.0, ...)

              – tomasb
              Jul 9 '18 at 16:38













              please add a comment to the bug report: bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=373232

              – MountainX
              Jul 10 '18 at 17:18





              please add a comment to the bug report: bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=373232

              – MountainX
              Jul 10 '18 at 17:18




              1




              1





              @tomasb - If you want this fixed, please consider creating a login so you can let the developers know it affects you. If you are too lazy to do even that, you have no right to complain about the workaround (or anything else) being "absurd". If you use open source, please find ways to contribute, even if by only voting or commenting on bug reports -- anything. Be part of the community.

              – BugBuddy
              Sep 25 '18 at 18:48





              @tomasb - If you want this fixed, please consider creating a login so you can let the developers know it affects you. If you are too lazy to do even that, you have no right to complain about the workaround (or anything else) being "absurd". If you use open source, please find ways to contribute, even if by only voting or commenting on bug reports -- anything. Be part of the community.

              – BugBuddy
              Sep 25 '18 at 18:48













              0














              As a workaround, you could change the Fonts DPI:




              1. go to Fonts, check the box Force Fonts DPI

              2. set to an appropriate value (I use 144 on a 2560x1440 screen, you may want to try 192 in 4K)


                • Higher DPI translate to bigger text in your screen



              3. Set the your display scaling factor back to 1

              4. Logout and login to your user (or restart)


              At this point the horizontal lines should be gone and you should be able to read everything on your screen






              share|improve this answer




























                0














                As a workaround, you could change the Fonts DPI:




                1. go to Fonts, check the box Force Fonts DPI

                2. set to an appropriate value (I use 144 on a 2560x1440 screen, you may want to try 192 in 4K)


                  • Higher DPI translate to bigger text in your screen



                3. Set the your display scaling factor back to 1

                4. Logout and login to your user (or restart)


                At this point the horizontal lines should be gone and you should be able to read everything on your screen






                share|improve this answer


























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  As a workaround, you could change the Fonts DPI:




                  1. go to Fonts, check the box Force Fonts DPI

                  2. set to an appropriate value (I use 144 on a 2560x1440 screen, you may want to try 192 in 4K)


                    • Higher DPI translate to bigger text in your screen



                  3. Set the your display scaling factor back to 1

                  4. Logout and login to your user (or restart)


                  At this point the horizontal lines should be gone and you should be able to read everything on your screen






                  share|improve this answer













                  As a workaround, you could change the Fonts DPI:




                  1. go to Fonts, check the box Force Fonts DPI

                  2. set to an appropriate value (I use 144 on a 2560x1440 screen, you may want to try 192 in 4K)


                    • Higher DPI translate to bigger text in your screen



                  3. Set the your display scaling factor back to 1

                  4. Logout and login to your user (or restart)


                  At this point the horizontal lines should be gone and you should be able to read everything on your screen







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Oct 29 '18 at 20:16









                  niconico

                  83




                  83























                      0














                      Another workaround is setting line interval to 1 in profile settings. It's almost unnoticeable, but fixes the issue.






                      share|improve this answer
























                      • We expect answers to be stand-alone and self-sufficient.  People should be able to understand your answer without needing to read the other answers.  What profile settings?  Where does the user set them, and how? … Please do not respond in comments; edit your answer to make it clearer and more complete.

                        – G-Man
                        Dec 5 '18 at 16:20


















                      0














                      Another workaround is setting line interval to 1 in profile settings. It's almost unnoticeable, but fixes the issue.






                      share|improve this answer
























                      • We expect answers to be stand-alone and self-sufficient.  People should be able to understand your answer without needing to read the other answers.  What profile settings?  Where does the user set them, and how? … Please do not respond in comments; edit your answer to make it clearer and more complete.

                        – G-Man
                        Dec 5 '18 at 16:20
















                      0












                      0








                      0







                      Another workaround is setting line interval to 1 in profile settings. It's almost unnoticeable, but fixes the issue.






                      share|improve this answer













                      Another workaround is setting line interval to 1 in profile settings. It's almost unnoticeable, but fixes the issue.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered Dec 5 '18 at 15:39









                      J. DoeJ. Doe

                      1




                      1













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                      Upgrading to Qt 5.12 is fine, but does not seem to fix the issue straight away. In Konsole profile settings under the advanced tab, change "Line Spacing" to 1. This has fixed the issue with horizontal lines for me.






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                        0














                        Upgrading to Qt 5.12 is fine, but does not seem to fix the issue straight away. In Konsole profile settings under the advanced tab, change "Line Spacing" to 1. This has fixed the issue with horizontal lines for me.






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                          0












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                          0







                          Upgrading to Qt 5.12 is fine, but does not seem to fix the issue straight away. In Konsole profile settings under the advanced tab, change "Line Spacing" to 1. This has fixed the issue with horizontal lines for me.






                          share|improve this answer













                          Upgrading to Qt 5.12 is fine, but does not seem to fix the issue straight away. In Konsole profile settings under the advanced tab, change "Line Spacing" to 1. This has fixed the issue with horizontal lines for me.







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered Jan 4 at 14:20









                          ismay7ismay7

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