February 15, 2026

PMP: Project Management Professional

PMP: Project Management Professional (PMI)

Project Management Institute (PMI) - Certified PMP

1 / 120

A critical system integration requires a full end‑to‑end environment, but your agile‑hybrid release trains only spin up ephemeral test environments per sprint. The integration team needs stable shared environments, yet cost constraints discourage long‑living environments.

How can you satisfy both needs?

2 / 120

Your global hybrid project operates across five time zones. Daily stand‑ups are at 8 AM PST, which is midnight for some team members, leading to poor participation.

Which adjustment respects both agile principles and global constraints?

3 / 120

Your hybrid project leverages feature toggles to deploy incomplete features safely. However, toggles have proliferated to 30+ in production, causing technical debt and complexity for testers.

What is the best plan to manage toggle debt in an agile‑hybrid context?

4 / 120

A key external auditor expresses concern that your agile teams don’t produce traceable documentation for every release, as required by company policy. The audit could block go‑live.

What hybrid documentation strategy addresses the audit without heavy overhead?

5 / 120

Your hybrid project tracks critical defects in a traditional defect‑tracking tool, while your agile team logs user stories in Jira. As defects rise, visibility is poor and resolution time lags.

Which integrated process improves defect tracking and resolution?

6 / 120

You’re adopting an agile‑hybrid model in a highly regulated banking environment. Every feature must pass security and compliance checklists before deployment. These checks happen outside of your sprint cycles and cause hand‑offs and context loss.

What streamlined approach maintains compliance without multiple hand‑offs?

7 / 120

The organization’s agile CoE mandates backlog refinement every week, but your hybrid project sprint length is three weeks. The team feels refinement sessions are too frequent and disrupt flow.

What’s the best scheduling compromise?

8 / 120

Your hybrid project uses traditional schedule baselines for hardware procurement but agile planning for software. A late vendor price increase threatens both hardware budget and the sprint cost forecasts.

How should you manage this dual‑track risk?

9 / 120

A critical team member skilled in both agile facilitation and technical design is overwhelmed acting as both Scrum Master and lead architect. Sprints are slipping and design decisions stall.

What hybrid role‑management approach addresses this?

10 / 120

Mid‑project, your sponsor approves a scope increase that adds several high‑priority epics. You have no additional budget. Your plan uses Agile Release Trains with PI (Program Increment) planning every 10 weeks.

What is the best way to incorporate the new epics?

11 / 120

You’re leading a hybrid transformation pilot: some teams are fully agile, others remain waterfall. You must roll out common tooling. The agile teams relish lightweight boards, while the waterfall teams need detailed task logs and approvals.

How do you implement a unified toolset that supports both styles?

12 / 120

Senior management insists on monthly steering‑committee reports with earned value metrics, yet your agile teams track progress via story points and velocity. The translation between these metrics is error‑prone.

Which approach bridges agile metrics and earned value reporting best?

13 / 120

Your product increments depend on a third‑party API that changes frequently. The API team follows strict waterfall release cycles, while your team moves in two‑week sprints. These mismatched cadences lead to integration failures at sprint boundaries.

What hybrid practice helps synchronize both teams?

14 / 120

In your agile‑hybrid project, regulatory compliance requires that each deliverable passes a formal design review. These design reviews take three days and can’t occur within a sprint.

How do you structure sprints to incorporate these external reviews?

15 / 120

You’re coaching a team that uses a hybrid approach: Scrum for feature development and Kanban for support tickets. The team complains that context switching between sprints and Kanban flow is causing delays and confusion about priorities.

What’s the best practice to streamline workflow without losing methodological benefits?

16 / 120

Your organization’s PMO mandates that cost and schedule baselines be locked before execution, but your team needs to reprioritize backlog items based on user feedback. The locked baselines hinder the ability to adapt to change.

Which tactic best accommodates both constraints?

17 / 120

A new stakeholder enters mid‑project and demands a detailed Gantt chart for all remaining work. Your team has been working from a prioritized backlog and burn‑down charts. Providing the Gantt chart will require significant effort and may date quickly.

What hybrid approach can you use to satisfy this stakeholder while preserving agile delivery?

18 / 120

You manage a hybrid project delivering a packaged software release. The first release is scheduled in four weeks via two-week sprints. Compliance documentation must accompany every release. The compliance lead cannot participate in sprint events due to other priorities, and sign‑offs are running two sprints behind, blocking demos to external partners.

How should you integrate compliance into your agile workflow without derailing velocity?

19 / 120

In your hybrid project, the governance board requires detailed design documents and sign‑off before any development can begin. However, the agile teams need to iterate on prototypes rapidly. You notice tension between completing upfront documentation and enabling fast feedback cycles, causing team morale to drop.

What is the best approach to balance governance and agility?

20 / 120

You’re the Scrum Master for a distributed team working on a hybrid project: the front‑end UI is developed via Scrum sprints, while the back‑end infrastructure is delivered in a traditional waterfall cadence. Mid‑sprint, the infrastructure lead informs you that a critical API endpoint will be delayed by two weeks, which will block several user‑story completions. The Product Owner still expects a full sprint review. What is the most appropriate way to handle this situation?

21 / 120

A strategic pivot in your organization shifts funding priorities away from your project’s original business case. The sponsor asks you to continue as planned while seeking new benefits.

How should you handle this?

22 / 120

You’re transitioning your team from a legacy on‑premises toolset to a new cloud‑based collaboration platform. Adoption is low, and productivity lags.

What’s the best strategy to drive adoption and minimize disruption?

23 / 120

Your project’s KPI dashboard shows that resource utilization is at 95% for the past three weeks, and team morale surveys report rising burnout risks.

What proactive measure should you take?

24 / 120

A newly onboarded stakeholder demands last‑minute changes just before your QA cycle. These changes will likely introduce defects and cause rework.

What’s the ethical and process‑aligned response?

25 / 120

During a governance audit, you find the project’s risk responses were not tracked in Performance Reports, despite being implemented. The auditor flags a compliance issue.

What corrective action will both address the audit finding and improve future reporting?

26 / 120

A global stakeholder group requires project artifacts in English, Spanish, and Mandarin. Translating every document will consume 15% of your budget.

Which approach optimizes cost while meeting requirements?

27 / 120

Your sponsor asks you to accelerate delivery by skipping non‑critical testing phases. The QA lead warns of increased defect risk and reputational harm.

What should you do first?

28 / 120

You discover a new regulation mid‑project that invalidates part of your data‑privacy approach. Revising your architecture will require three additional sprints and significant budget impacts.

How should you handle this change?

29 / 120

A high‑impact risk materializes: a key subcontractor declares bankruptcy. Your risk register had identified financial instability as a medium‑probability risk.

What’s the immediate priority?

30 / 120

Your agile‑hybrid project uses two‑week sprints, but regulatory documentation requires formal sign‑off on each deliverable heatmap. The sign‑off process takes four weeks, causing a backlog.

What’s the best way to integrate regulatory control without derailing the sprint cadence?

31 / 120

Stakeholder sentiment surveys indicate declining trust in project leadership after a series of communication breakdowns.

Which corrective action should the project manager take to rebuild trust and transparency?

32 / 120

A critical path activity is crashing due to resource shortages. You need to accelerate without adding headcount or increasing risk substantially.

Which schedule compression technique is most appropriate?

33 / 120

You are negotiating a Statement of Work (SOW) with a strategic partner. They propose a cost‑plus contract, but you’re concerned about potential cost overruns and lack of incentive for efficiency.

What contract type would better align incentives with performance?

34 / 120

Late in execution, your cost performance index (CPI) drops below 0.9. The sponsor demands you bring cumulative costs back within budget before the next steering committee.

Which action is most consistent with PMI’s ethics and best practices?

35 / 120

Your project charter includes a high‑level benefit of “improved customer satisfaction.” During execution, stakeholders debate how to measure this nebulous benefit.

What’s the best approach to bring clarity and ensure measurable outcomes?

36 / 120

A key stakeholder insists on daily status reports via email, while the distributed team prefers asynchronous updates in your collaboration tool. The overload of emails is causing confusion and lost information.

Which communication plan adjustment best balances stakeholder needs and team efficiency?

37 / 120

In a matrix organization, one of your senior subject‑matter experts has been repeatedly reassigned by their functional manager during critical design sprints, causing bottlenecks.

What is the most collaborative way to ensure sustained SME availability without escalating conflict?

38 / 120

Your software rollout to 5,000 users is behind schedule because testing in one market uncovered severe localization bugs. The defect backlog now threatens to delay go‑live in all other markets.

What is the best risk‑response strategy to apply?

39 / 120

During the planning of a highly regulated pharmaceutical trial, your Quality Management Plan requires root‑cause analysis of any process deviations. A late‑stage audit uncovers inconsistent documentation practices across two regions, risking non‑compliance.

Which tool or technique should you apply first to address the issue systematically?

40 / 120

You’re leading a multinational infrastructure upgrade project. Mid‑execution, your vendor notifies you that a key hardware component will be delayed by six weeks due to a supply chain disruption. This delay will push critical path activities into the next fiscal quarter, jeopardizing your organization’s year‑end reporting goals and bonus structure. What is the most appropriate next step?

41 / 120

You’re closing a project and want to ensure all deliverables meet quality requirements. Which document should be reviewed?

42 / 120

You receive a request to change the project's scope. It will require additional budget and time. Who is responsible for approving this change?

43 / 120

You are leading a cross-functional project. Team members from different departments are not aligned on priorities. What is the best strategy to move forward?

44 / 120

During project execution, a team member identifies a more efficient process to reduce costs. What should the project manager do?

45 / 120

Your project is transitioning from planning to execution. Which document should be finalized and signed off before moving forward?

46 / 120

You are managing a distributed team across three countries. What’s the best way to ensure consistent communication and understanding?

47 / 120

A project is behind schedule due to a late hardware delivery. To recover time, the project manager adds more technicians to the team. This is an example of:

48 / 120

A project manager creates a scatter diagram to show a potential relationship between the number of overtime hours and defect rates. What is the project manager trying to determine?

49 / 120

The project sponsor requests a fast-tracked delivery. You decide to start construction before finalizing all designs, increasing risk. This is an example of

50 / 120

A key stakeholder frequently interrupts sprint planning with changing priorities. What’s the best way for the project manager to manage this behavior?

51 / 120

The team has completed several sprints, but stakeholders are unhappy with the product's usability. What should the project manager do?

52 / 120

A project manager is monitoring a supplier’s performance using Service Level Agreements (SLAs). What process are they performing?

53 / 120

During a project retrospective, the team identifies that poor communication led to unnecessary rework. What should the project manager do next?

54 / 120

After a team member leaves the project unexpectedly, the project manager updates the risk register to reflect the reduced team capacity. What process is being performed?

55 / 120

You’re managing a project in a matrix organization. One of your resources is often pulled away by their functional manager, causing delays. What should you do first?

56 / 120

A project manager wants to visualize the trend of defects over multiple testing cycles. Which tool should they use?

57 / 120

While managing a software deployment project, the customer requests a major change in features midway through execution. The team estimates it will impact the schedule and cost significantly.

What is the next step the project manager should take?

58 / 120

A project team member approaches the project manager to express discomfort with another team member's behavior. The project manager listens actively, empathizes, and works to resolve the issue collaboratively.

What interpersonal skill is the project manager demonstrating?

59 / 120

A project sponsor requests a high-level summary of current project performance to present to executives. What should the project manager provide?

60 / 120

During a construction project, the project manager identifies that stakeholder expectations are misaligned with the project scope. To resolve this, the project manager decides to schedule a meeting to clarify deliverables and expected outcomes. What is the project manager aiming to achieve?

61 / 120

During a retrospective meeting, two team members disagree about their involvement in a recent work incident, accusing each other of dodging responsibility.

To avoid such an issue in the future, the project manager decides to create a RACI matrix. RACI is an acronym for:

62 / 120

A project is 50% complete. During its planning phase, the project manager divided the project into 4 consecutive phases. Now that phase 2 is completed, they’re moving to phase 3.

Based on the above table, how much is this project’s Earned Value (EV)?

63 / 120

A project manager is managing a project that consists of implementing an accounting application for a pet store. During a project performance review meeting, they presented the following figures:

AC = $4,000, PV = $5,000, and EV = $5,500.

What does that indicate about the project?

64 / 120

A project manager joins a company, which has recently gone through major organizational changes. The new project manager is very concerned about the team’s lack of motivation and closely monitors when they arrive and leave work.

What type of management style does the new project manager exhibit?

65 / 120

A project manager makes sure that their team has a healthy work environment by providing safe working conditions, job security, and rewarding salaries, with an emphasis on work appreciation.

According to Herzberg, which of the following options are NOT example of hygiene factors?

66 / 120

A project manager is managing a biodegradable packaging project. One of the team members informed the project manager that she identified a risk, the printing machine may need maintenance before the end of the project. The project manager estimates the risk’s probability of occurrence as 10% and its cost as $5,000.

This risk’s expected monetary value is:

67 / 120

Managing an electric car manufacturing project, a project manager is facing a complicated quality problem that they don’t understand its source and causes. They set a meeting with their team to discuss the matter and to initially trace the problem source back to its root cause.

68 / 120

A project manager notices that his colleague, who is a fellow project manager, shows up at the office with new high-tech gadgets every day. This raises his suspicions that his colleague might be accepting gifts from hardware vendors who will be bidding on one of their company’s upcoming multimillion-dollar contracts.

What should the project manager do next?

69 / 120

A project manager is assigned to an eco-friendly packaging project. In order to manage involved stakeholders, the project manager starts by analyzing their power, urgency, and legitimacy.

Which analysis method is the project manager applying?

70 / 120

An organization is deliberating over two potential projects that have exactly the same payback period. After doing a benefit measurement analysis, the project manager finds out that Project A has a lower Internal Rate of Return (IRR) than Project B.

What project should the organization choose?

71 / 120

Your Agile team releases functionality every two weeks. A stakeholder insists on performing final acceptance testing only at the end of the project, citing risk of premature sign-off.

What should you do?

72 / 120

You’re managing a global hybrid project. Agile teams in different time zones struggle to align on priorities, while stakeholders expect consolidated weekly status in a predictive format.

What should you implement?

73 / 120

Your team delivers a software product in sprints. A predictive client demands a full scope definition and cost breakdown before committing funding. However, product requirements are still evolving.

What’s your best course of action?

74 / 120

A hybrid project you’re leading uses Scrum for software development and a predictive model for infrastructure. Your infrastructure lead has been missing Agile ceremonies and failing to provide timely updates, causing integration issues.

How should you resolve this?

75 / 120

A predictive project requires regulatory testing at multiple stages. The testing team proposes incorporating exploratory testing methods used in Agile to improve test coverage and defect detection.

What is the best approach?

76 / 120

The product owner in an Agile workstream of your hybrid project frequently reprioritizes the backlog mid-sprint, disrupting the team’s progress and velocity. Team morale is declining, and burn-down charts are erratic.

What should the project manager do?

77 / 120

A critical milestone is approaching in your hybrid project. Your Agile team is ready to demo key features, but senior leadership—used to predictive reviews—expects a detailed sign-off document with full traceability.

What should you do?

78 / 120

During an iteration review in a hybrid project, a client stakeholder expresses disappointment that user stories did not fully reflect business processes. The Product Owner clarifies that the client had not participated in story grooming or sprint planning.

How should this situation be addressed?

79 / 120

A predictive project nearing closure has completed all deliverables. However, an executive stakeholder claims that the project did not meet business expectations due to a lack of flexibility and engagement throughout execution.

What should the project manager do to prevent this in future projects?

80 / 120

A cross-functional team working on a hybrid project is experiencing delays in completing documentation required by the PMO. The agile team considers it overhead and is focusing solely on velocity and product increments.

How should the project manager address this challenge?

81 / 120

You’re managing a project with defined scope and a fixed delivery date. Your agile development team identifies a backlog item that would provide significant value to the customer but is not part of the original requirements. They propose replacing a lower-value feature.

What should you do?

82 / 120

In a hybrid project, a key vendor delivers components late for two consecutive iterations, disrupting your Agile team’s development plan. The vendor contract was established under a fixed timeline with milestone penalties in the predictive framework.

What is your best course of action?

83 / 120

You are managing a predictive project and receive feedback that your team is disengaged, with low morale and limited ownership. Some team members express interest in using Agile practices to foster collaboration. The sponsor insists the project stick to original methodologies due to contractual constraints.

What’s the most effective response?

84 / 120

During the project planning phase of a predictive software implementation, a key stakeholder requests that Agile concepts such as backlog grooming and demos be incorporated into the traditional schedule. You are concerned about maintaining consistency with regulatory deliverables and approval gates.

What should you do?

85 / 120

You're overseeing a hybrid project with Agile feature development and predictive regulatory compliance components. While reviewing status, you find that the compliance tasks are falling behind, yet Agile development is proceeding at full speed. This mismatch could delay integration testing and impact launch.

What action should you take?

86 / 120

Your team is developing an enterprise-level HR management platform. The core system is built using a predictive approach, while a mobile app component is developed iteratively using Agile. The mobile team wants to push early releases to beta testers, but the core team insists that no component can go live until full system integration.

What is the most appropriate response as project manager?

87 / 120

A distributed agile team is delivering functionality across four product areas. One of the business stakeholders begins contacting individual developers directly with feature changes during the sprint. This has led to confusion, rework, and inconsistent delivery across stories.

What should the project manager do?

88 / 120

Your project is in the execution phase of a predictive model with tightly defined scope, cost, and schedule baselines. An executive sponsor, impressed by a recent industry innovation, asks your team to explore integrating a new feature that was not in the original requirements. The team estimates that implementing the feature would impact both budget and schedule significantly.

What should you do next?

89 / 120

A predictive project team is falling behind due to slow change approvals and excessive documentation overhead. The PMO is open to introducing Agile techniques to improve execution speed but is concerned about audit trail requirements.

What should you propose?

90 / 120

Your organization wants to adopt hybrid methods but has deeply entrenched predictive controls. A senior manager suggests running a pilot Agile project. However, the procurement process still demands fixed-price contracts with complete scope documentation before work begins.

How can you support Agile delivery within these constraints?

91 / 120

Your predictive project’s critical path includes deliverables from an Agile vendor. The vendor’s sprints do not align with your planned milestone delivery. This has led to late handovers and impacted subsequent work.

What is your best course of action?

92 / 120

A hybrid project is struggling with stakeholder engagement. Agile stakeholders want more frequent demonstrations and fast iterations. Predictive stakeholders want detailed documentation and fixed reporting intervals.

How should the project manager address this divide?

93 / 120

During a critical phase of your predictive project, a stakeholder pushes for Agile-based visual boards for tracking work, citing lack of visibility into task status. Your team is following the work breakdown structure and Gantt charts closely, and doesn’t see value in changing tools.

What is the most balanced response?

94 / 120

You are managing a program with multiple projects—some run Agile and others predictive. While consolidating project reports, you notice inconsistent formats, mismatched KPIs, and difficulty in aggregating status updates for executive stakeholders.

What should you do to improve alignment?

95 / 120

A highly visible predictive government project requires strict reporting and documentation. The project team wants to apply Agile estimation techniques like story points to improve planning accuracy. However, the PMO only accepts time-based estimates.

What is the best way to bridge both expectations?

96 / 120

An Agile team under your supervision is ahead of schedule delivering features. However, the client’s testing team is only available on a fixed schedule based on the predictive milestone plan. The early deliveries are sitting idle, and the team’s morale is dropping due to lack of feedback.

How should you handle this situation?

97 / 120

You are managing a hybrid project with monthly planning meetings and bi-weekly sprint reviews. One of the sprint reviews exposed a critical dependency between two agile teams that was not identified during the predictive planning phase. This dependency is now impacting the overall timeline.

What is the best immediate course of action?

98 / 120

A predictive project is experiencing delays due to internal decision bottlenecks and long approval cycles. Several team members suggest adopting Agile ceremonies like daily stand-ups and retrospectives to improve communication. Senior management is skeptical about mixing methods.

What is the most effective way to proceed?

99 / 120

Your project team is developing a product using Agile methods, but the contract with the client is fixed price with defined scope and deliverables. Midway through the project, the client asks for additional features based on recent market research. The team is open to adding value, but the fixed contract poses a constraint.

How should the project manager respond?

100 / 120

Your project team recently transitioned to a hybrid model. The development team uses Scrum, but your organization’s quality assurance department follows a traditional sequential testing process. After Sprint 3, defects from Sprint 1 are still unresolved because the QA team did not participate during the sprints.

What is the best step to address this challenge?

101 / 120

You're leading a hybrid project where infrastructure is deployed through a predictive plan, while feature development uses Agile. Midway through the project, the infrastructure deployment is delayed by two weeks due to resource constraints. The Agile team continues delivering stories, but system testing cannot begin without the infrastructure. The client is growing impatient.

What should you do to maintain transparency and minimize schedule impact?

102 / 120

During the planning phase of a predictive enterprise ERP deployment, stakeholders from multiple departments begin requesting continuous demos of partially completed modules. However, your current project plan shows no deliverables until the end of Phase 2, three months away. You understand the importance of engagement but need to protect scope and schedule.

What is the most effective approach?

103 / 120

A software delivery team working within a hybrid environment has missed its release deadline because integration testing across modules was not synchronized. The agile development teams completed their sprints on time, but the predictive release planning did not factor in delays from an external vendor API. The sponsor is concerned about systemic breakdowns in planning.

What should the project manager do first?

104 / 120

While managing a predictive construction project with strict regulatory oversight, you initiate a stakeholder engagement workshop. One influential stakeholder demands weekly agile-style check-ins and requests flexible deadlines to accommodate changing priorities. You recognize the benefits of collaboration but are limited by a rigid contract and fixed milestones.

How should you handle this situation?

105 / 120

Your project is delivering a new digital banking platform. The front-end customer interface is being developed using Agile practices with two-week sprints, while the back-end system integrations follow a predictive lifecycle. During sprint planning, the Product Owner identifies new customer behavior patterns that suggest a shift in interface design priorities. However, changing these priorities would delay interface testing, which the back-end team needs to complete their integration milestones.

What should the project manager do to balance competing lifecycle constraints?

106 / 120

A client on your project has introduced a new reporting template and asks you to start using it immediately, even though it doesn’t align with the current Communication Management Plan.

What should you do?

107 / 120

Your predictive project has entered the execution phase. A sponsor requests you to present the expected time of completion based on current performance. Your team provides the following:

  • PV = $100,000

  • EV = $90,000

  • AC = $110,000

What metric should you use to forecast project completion?

108 / 120

You’re in the Monitor Risks process and find that a high-impact risk flagged earlier has now increased in probability. No response plan was defined originally because it was low probability.

What is the correct step to take now?

109 / 120

You’re managing a predictive healthcare IT project. The Change Control Board has become a bottleneck, taking weeks to approve small changes. Several changes have caused schedule delays.

How should you optimize the change control process?

110 / 120

A government-funded project requires strict adherence to Earned Value Management. Your weekly reports show a CPI of 0.7 and SPI of 0.95. The sponsor is requesting continued delivery with no additional funding.

Which strategy should you prioritize?

111 / 120

You’re closing a high-budget infrastructure project. While preparing the final performance report, the finance team reports that several change orders approved during execution were not updated in the cost baseline.

What should you do before final project closure?

112 / 120

In a predictive project, your team continuously submits incomplete status reports with missing KPIs. This leads to miscommunication with external auditors and misalignment with the communications management plan.

What corrective action should you implement?

113 / 120

You are in the planning phase of a mission-critical software rollout project. A cross-functional review team identifies that security testing was omitted from the WBS, even though it was included in the scope statement.

What is the best course of action?

114 / 120

During the planning phase of a large construction project, one of the stakeholders insists on using a local materials supplier despite concerns over quality and delivery timelines. The procurement team is aligned with using a vetted, international supplier.

What should you do?

115 / 120

During procurement planning, one of your subcontractors informs you that the initial quote will increase by 15% due to new import taxes. This cost was not accounted for in your original budget estimate.

What is the best action to maintain project constraints?

116 / 120

During the closing phase, your team discovers a defect in a deliverable that has already been accepted by the client. The contract has a clause that permits defect repair at no cost for 90 days post-handover.

What should you do?

117 / 120

You’re managing a predictive multi-year engineering project. Halfway through, a regulatory body introduces new compliance requirements. The change affects project scope, duration, and cost.

What should be done first?

118 / 120

While performing the Monitor and Control Project Work process, you find that SPI is below 0.8 and CPI is 1.05. Senior management is pleased with cost control, but stakeholders are dissatisfied with schedule delays.

What is the best course of action?

119 / 120

As part of quality management on a predictive project, a contractor is required to provide reports on concrete strength every 48 hours. Three consecutive reports were missed without explanation.

What should you do next as the project manager?

120 / 120

While performing schedule development, you discover that several activities lack dependency relationships, making the critical path calculation unreliable. Some team leads argue that their tasks are too independent to be sequenced.

What should you do?

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