ÿØÿà�JFIF������ÿápExif��II*������[������¼ p!ranha?
Server IP : 104.21.87.198  /  Your IP : 172.69.176.58
Web Server : Apache/2.2.15 (CentOS)
System : Linux GA 2.6.32-431.1.2.0.1.el6.x86_64 #1 SMP Fri Dec 13 13:06:13 UTC 2013 x86_64
User : apache ( 48)
PHP Version : 5.6.38
Disable Function : NONE
MySQL : ON  |  cURL : ON  |  WGET : ON  |  Perl : ON  |  Python : ON  |  Sudo : ON  |  Pkexec : OFF
Directory :  /usr/share/perl5/pod/

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

 
Command :
Current File : /usr/share/perl5/pod/perlboot.pod
=head1 NAME

perlboot - Beginner's Object-Oriented Tutorial

=head1 DESCRIPTION

If you're not familiar with objects from other languages, some of the
other Perl object documentation may be a little daunting, such as
L<perlobj>, a basic reference in using objects, and L<perltoot>, which
introduces readers to the peculiarities of Perl's object system in a
tutorial way.

So, let's take a different approach, presuming no prior object
experience. It helps if you know about subroutines (L<perlsub>),
references (L<perlref> et. seq.), and packages (L<perlmod>), so become
familiar with those first if you haven't already.

=head2 If we could talk to the animals...

Let's let the animals talk for a moment:

    sub Cow::speak {
      print "a Cow goes moooo!\n";
    }
    sub Horse::speak {
      print "a Horse goes neigh!\n";
    }
    sub Sheep::speak {
      print "a Sheep goes baaaah!\n";
    }

    Cow::speak;
    Horse::speak;
    Sheep::speak;

This results in:

    a Cow goes moooo!
    a Horse goes neigh!
    a Sheep goes baaaah!

Nothing spectacular here.  Simple subroutines, albeit from separate
packages, and called using the full package name.  So let's create
an entire pasture:

    # Cow::speak, Horse::speak, Sheep::speak as before
    @pasture = qw(Cow Cow Horse Sheep Sheep);
    foreach $animal (@pasture) {
      &{$animal."::speak"};
    }

This results in:

    a Cow goes moooo!
    a Cow goes moooo!
    a Horse goes neigh!
    a Sheep goes baaaah!
    a Sheep goes baaaah!

Wow.  That symbolic coderef de-referencing there is pretty nasty.
We're counting on C<no strict refs> mode, certainly not recommended
for larger programs.  And why was that necessary?  Because the name of
the package seems to be inseparable from the name of the subroutine we
want to invoke within that package.

Or is it?

=head2 Introducing the method invocation arrow

For now, let's say that C<< Class->method >> invokes subroutine
C<method> in package C<Class>.  (Here, "Class" is used in its
"category" meaning, not its "scholastic" meaning.) That's not
completely accurate, but we'll do this one step at a time.  Now let's
use it like so:

    # Cow::speak, Horse::speak, Sheep::speak as before
    Cow->speak;
    Horse->speak;
    Sheep->speak;

And once again, this results in:

    a Cow goes moooo!
    a Horse goes neigh!
    a Sheep goes baaaah!

That's not fun yet.  Same number of characters, all constant, no
variables.  But yet, the parts are separable now.  Watch:

    $a = "Cow";
    $a->speak; # invokes Cow->speak

Ahh!  Now that the package name has been parted from the subroutine
name, we can use a variable package name.  And this time, we've got
something that works even when C<use strict refs> is enabled.

=head2 Invoking a barnyard

Let's take that new arrow invocation and put it back in the barnyard
example:

    sub Cow::speak {
      print "a Cow goes moooo!\n";
    }
    sub Horse::speak {
      print "a Horse goes neigh!\n";
    }
    sub Sheep::speak {
      print "a Sheep goes baaaah!\n";
    }

    @pasture = qw(Cow Cow Horse Sheep Sheep);
    foreach $animal (@pasture) {
      $animal->speak;
    }

There!  Now we have the animals all talking, and safely at that,
without the use of symbolic coderefs.

But look at all that common code.  Each of the C<speak> routines has a
similar structure: a C<print> operator and a string that contains
common text, except for two of the words.  It'd be nice if we could
factor out the commonality, in case we decide later to change it all
to C<says> instead of C<goes>.

And we actually have a way of doing that without much fuss, but we
have to hear a bit more about what the method invocation arrow is
actually doing for us.

=head2 The extra parameter of method invocation

The invocation of:

    Class->method(@args)

attempts to invoke subroutine C<Class::method> as:

    Class::method("Class", @args);

(If the subroutine can't be found, "inheritance" kicks in, but we'll
get to that later.)  This means that we get the class name as the
first parameter (the only parameter, if no arguments are given).  So
we can rewrite the C<Sheep> speaking subroutine as:

    sub Sheep::speak {
      my $class = shift;
      print "a $class goes baaaah!\n";
    }

And the other two animals come out similarly:

    sub Cow::speak {
      my $class = shift;
      print "a $class goes moooo!\n";
    }
    sub Horse::speak {
      my $class = shift;
      print "a $class goes neigh!\n";
    }

In each case, C<$class> will get the value appropriate for that
subroutine.  But once again, we have a lot of similar structure.  Can
we factor that out even further?  Yes, by calling another method in
the same class.

=head2 Calling a second method to simplify things

Let's call out from C<speak> to a helper method called C<sound>.
This method provides the constant text for the sound itself.

    { package Cow;
      sub sound { "moooo" }
      sub speak {
        my $class = shift;
        print "a $class goes ", $class->sound, "!\n";
      }
    }

Now, when we call C<< Cow->speak >>, we get a C<$class> of C<Cow> in
C<speak>.  This in turn selects the C<< Cow->sound >> method, which
returns C<moooo>.  But how different would this be for the C<Horse>?

    { package Horse;
      sub sound { "neigh" }
      sub speak {
        my $class = shift;
        print "a $class goes ", $class->sound, "!\n";
      }
    }

Only the name of the package and the specific sound change.  So can we
somehow share the definition for C<speak> between the Cow and the
Horse?  Yes, with inheritance!

=head2 Inheriting the windpipes

We'll define a common subroutine package called C<Animal>, with the
definition for C<speak>:

    { package Animal;
      sub speak {
      my $class = shift;
      print "a $class goes ", $class->sound, "!\n";
      }
    }

Then, for each animal, we say it "inherits" from C<Animal>, along
with the animal-specific sound:

    { package Cow;
      @ISA = qw(Animal);
      sub sound { "moooo" }
    }

Note the added C<@ISA> array (pronounced "is a").  We'll get to that in a minute.

But what happens when we invoke C<< Cow->speak >> now?

First, Perl constructs the argument list.  In this case, it's just
C<Cow>.  Then Perl looks for C<Cow::speak>.  But that's not there, so
Perl checks for the inheritance array C<@Cow::ISA>.  It's there,
and contains the single name C<Animal>.

Perl next checks for C<speak> inside C<Animal> instead, as in
C<Animal::speak>.  And that's found, so Perl invokes that subroutine
with the already frozen argument list.

Inside the C<Animal::speak> subroutine, C<$class> becomes C<Cow> (the
first argument).  So when we get to the step of invoking
C<< $class->sound >>, it'll be looking for C<< Cow->sound >>, which
gets it on the first try without looking at C<@ISA>.  Success!

=head2 A few notes about @ISA

This magical C<@ISA> variable has declared that C<Cow> "is a" C<Animal>.
Note that it's an array, not a simple single value, because on rare
occasions, it makes sense to have more than one parent class searched
for the missing methods.

If C<Animal> also had an C<@ISA>, then we'd check there too.  The
search is recursive, depth-first, left-to-right in each C<@ISA> by
default (see L<mro> for alternatives).  Typically, each C<@ISA> has
only one element (multiple elements means multiple inheritance and
multiple headaches), so we get a nice tree of inheritance.

When we turn on C<use strict>, we'll get complaints on C<@ISA>, since
it's not a variable containing an explicit package name, nor is it a
lexical ("my") variable.  We can't make it a lexical variable though
(it has to belong to the package to be found by the inheritance mechanism),
so there's a couple of straightforward ways to handle that.

The easiest is to just spell the package name out:

    @Cow::ISA = qw(Animal);

Or declare it as package global variable:

    package Cow;
    our @ISA = qw(Animal);

Or allow it as an implicitly named package variable:

    package Cow;
    use vars qw(@ISA);
    @ISA = qw(Animal);

If the C<Animal> class comes from another (object-oriented) module, then
just employ C<use base> to specify that C<Animal> should serve as the basis
for the C<Cow> class:

    package Cow;
    use base qw(Animal);

Now that's pretty darn simple!

=head2 Overriding the methods

Let's add a mouse, which can barely be heard:

    # Animal package from before
    { package Mouse;
      @ISA = qw(Animal);
      sub sound { "squeak" }
      sub speak {
        my $class = shift;
        print "a $class goes ", $class->sound, "!\n";
        print "[but you can barely hear it!]\n";
      }
    }

    Mouse->speak;

which results in:

    a Mouse goes squeak!
    [but you can barely hear it!]

Here, C<Mouse> has its own speaking routine, so C<< Mouse->speak >>
doesn't immediately invoke C<< Animal->speak >>. This is known as
"overriding". In fact, we don't even need to say that a C<Mouse> is
an C<Animal> at all, because all of the methods needed for C<speak> are
completely defined for C<Mouse>; this is known as "duck typing":
"If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, I would call it a duck"
(James Whitcomb). However, it would probably be beneficial to allow a
closer examination to conclude that a C<Mouse> is indeed an C<Animal>,
so it is actually better to define C<Mouse> with C<Animal> as its base
(that is, it is better to "derive C<Mouse> from C<Animal>").

Moreover, this duplication of code could become a maintenance headache
(though code-reuse is not actually a good reason for inheritance; good
design practices dictate that a derived class should be usable wherever
its base class is usable, which might not be the outcome if code-reuse
is the sole criterion for inheritance. Just remember that a C<Mouse>
should always act like an C<Animal>).

So, let's make C<Mouse> an C<Animal>!

The obvious solution is to invoke C<Animal::speak> directly:

    # Animal package from before
    { package Mouse;
      @ISA = qw(Animal);
      sub sound { "squeak" }
      sub speak {
        my $class = shift;
        Animal::speak($class);
        print "[but you can barely hear it!]\n";
      }
    }

Note that we're using C<Animal::speak>. If we were to invoke
C<< Animal->speak >> instead, the first parameter to C<Animal::speak>
would automatically be C<"Animal"> rather than C<"Mouse">, so that
the call to C<< $class->sound >> in C<Animal::speak> would become
C<< Animal->sound >> rather than C<< Mouse->sound >>.

Also, without the method arrow C<< -> >>, it becomes necessary to specify
the first parameter to C<Animal::speak> ourselves, which is why C<$class>
is explicitly passed: C<Animal::speak($class)>.

However, invoking C<Animal::speak> directly is a mess: Firstly, it assumes
that the C<speak> method is a member of the C<Animal> class; what if C<Animal>
actually inherits C<speak> from its own base? Because we are no longer using
C<< -> >> to access C<speak>, the special method look up mechanism wouldn't be
used, so C<speak> wouldn't even be found!

The second problem is more subtle: C<Animal> is now hardwired into the subroutine
selection. Let's assume that C<Animal::speak> does exist. What happens when,
at a later time, someone expands the class hierarchy by having C<Mouse>
inherit from C<Mus> instead of C<Animal>. Unless the invocation of C<Animal::speak>
is also changed to an invocation of C<Mus::speak>, centuries worth of taxonomical
classification could be obliterated!

What we have here is a fragile or leaky abstraction; it is the beginning of a
maintenance nightmare. What we need is the ability to search for the right
method wih as few assumptions as possible.

=head2 Starting the search from a different place

A I<better> solution is to tell Perl where in the inheritance chain to begin searching
for C<speak>. This can be achieved with a modified version of the method arrow C<< -> >>:

    ClassName->FirstPlaceToLook::method

So, the improved C<Mouse> class is:

    # same Animal as before
    { package Mouse;
      # same @ISA, &sound as before
      sub speak {
        my $class = shift;
        $class->Animal::speak;
        print "[but you can barely hear it!]\n";
      }
    }

Using this syntax, we start with C<Animal> to find C<speak>, and then
use all of C<Animal>'s inheritance chain if it is not found immediately.
As usual, the first parameter to C<speak> would be C<$class>, so we no
longer need to pass C<$class> explicitly to C<speak>.

But what about the second problem? We're still hardwiring C<Animal> into
the method lookup.

=head2 The SUPER way of doing things

If C<Animal> is replaced with the special placeholder C<SUPER> in that
invocation, then the contents of C<Mouse>'s C<@ISA> are used for the
search, beginning with C<$ISA[0]>. So, all of the problems can be fixed
as follows:

    # same Animal as before
    { package Mouse;
      # same @ISA, &sound as before
      sub speak {
        my $class = shift;
        $class->SUPER::speak;
        print "[but you can barely hear it!]\n";
      }
    }

In general, C<SUPER::speak> means look in the current package's C<@ISA>
for a class that implements C<speak>, and invoke the first one found.
The placeholder is called C<SUPER>, because many other languages refer
to base classes as "I<super>classes", and Perl likes to be eclectic.

Note that a call such as

    $class->SUPER::method;

does I<not> look in the C<@ISA> of C<$class> unless C<$class> happens to
be the current package.

=head2 Let's review...

So far, we've seen the method arrow syntax:

  Class->method(@args);

or the equivalent:

  $a = "Class";
  $a->method(@args);

which constructs an argument list of:

  ("Class", @args)

and attempts to invoke:

  Class::method("Class", @args);

However, if C<Class::method> is not found, then C<@Class::ISA> is examined
(recursively) to locate a class (a package) that does indeed contain C<method>,
and that subroutine is invoked instead.

Using this simple syntax, we have class methods, (multiple) inheritance,
overriding, and extending. Using just what we've seen so far, we've
been able to factor out common code (though that's never a good reason
for inheritance!), and provide a nice way to reuse implementations with
variations.

Now, what about data?

=head2 A horse is a horse, of course of course -- or is it?

Let's start with the code for the C<Animal> class
and the C<Horse> class:

  { package Animal;
    sub speak {
      my $class = shift;
      print "a $class goes ", $class->sound, "!\n";
    }
  }
  { package Horse;
    @ISA = qw(Animal);
    sub sound { "neigh" }
  }

This lets us invoke C<< Horse->speak >> to ripple upward to
C<Animal::speak>, calling back to C<Horse::sound> to get the specific
sound, and the output of:

  a Horse goes neigh!

But all of our Horse objects would have to be absolutely identical.
If we add a subroutine, all horses automatically share it. That's
great for making horses the same, but how do we capture the
distinctions of an individual horse?  For example, suppose we want
to give our first horse a name. There's got to be a way to keep its
name separate from the other horses.

That is to say, we want particular instances of C<Horse> to have
different names.

In Perl, any reference can be an "instance", so let's start with the
simplest reference that can hold a horse's name: a scalar reference.

  my $name = "Mr. Ed";
  my $horse = \$name;

So, now C<$horse> is a reference to what will be the instance-specific
data (the name). The final step is to turn this reference into a real
instance of a C<Horse> by using the special operator C<bless>:

  bless $horse, Horse;

This operator stores information about the package named C<Horse> into
the thing pointed at by the reference.  At this point, we say
C<$horse> is an instance of C<Horse>.  That is, it's a specific
horse.  The reference is otherwise unchanged, and can still be used
with traditional dereferencing operators.

=head2 Invoking an instance method

The method arrow can be used on instances, as well as classes (the names
of packages). So, let's get the sound that C<$horse> makes:

  my $noise = $horse->sound("some", "unnecessary", "args");

To invoke C<sound>, Perl first notes that C<$horse> is a blessed
reference (and thus an instance).  It then constructs an argument
list, as per usual.

Now for the fun part: Perl takes the class in which the instance was
blessed, in this case C<Horse>, and uses that class to locate the
subroutine. In this case, C<Horse::sound> is found directly (without
using inheritance). In the end, it is as though our initial line were
written as follows:

  my $noise = Horse::sound($horse, "some", "unnecessary", "args");

Note that the first parameter here is still the instance, not the name
of the class as before.  We'll get C<neigh> as the return value, and
that'll end up as the C<$noise> variable above.

If Horse::sound had not been found, we'd be wandering up the C<@Horse::ISA>
array, trying to find the method in one of the superclasses. The only
difference between a class method and an instance method is whether the
first parameter is an instance (a blessed reference) or a class name (a
string).

=head2 Accessing the instance data

Because we get the instance as the first parameter, we can now access
the instance-specific data.  In this case, let's add a way to get at
the name:

  { package Horse;
    @ISA = qw(Animal);
    sub sound { "neigh" }
    sub name {
      my $self = shift;
      $$self;
    }
  }

Inside C<Horse::name>, the C<@_> array contains:

    ($horse, "some", "unnecessary", "args")

so the C<shift> stores C<$horse> into C<$self>. Then, C<$self> gets
de-referenced with C<$$self> as normal, yielding C<"Mr. Ed">.

It's traditional to C<shift> the first parameter into a variable named
C<$self> for instance methods and into a variable named C<$class> for
class methods.

Then, the following line:

  print $horse->name, " says ", $horse->sound, "\n";

outputs:

  Mr. Ed says neigh.

=head2 How to build a horse

Of course, if we constructed all of our horses by hand, we'd most
likely make mistakes from time to time.  We're also violating one of
the properties of object-oriented programming, in that the "inside
guts" of a Horse are visible.  That's good if you're a veterinarian,
but not if you just like to own horses.  So, let's have the Horse
class handle the details inside a class method:

  { package Horse;
    @ISA = qw(Animal);
    sub sound { "neigh" }
    sub name {
      my $self = shift;     # instance method, so use $self
      $$self;
    }
    sub named {
      my $class = shift;    # class method, so use $class
      my $name = shift;
      bless \$name, $class;
    }
  }

Now with the new C<named> method, we can build a horse as follows:

  my $horse = Horse->named("Mr. Ed");

Notice we're back to a class method, so the two arguments to
C<Horse::named> are C<Horse> and C<Mr. Ed>.  The C<bless> operator
not only blesses C<\$name>, it also returns that reference.

This C<Horse::named> method is called a "constructor".

We've called the constructor C<named> here, so that it quickly denotes
the constructor's argument as the name for this particular C<Horse>.
You can use different constructors with different names for different
ways of "giving birth" to the object (like maybe recording its
pedigree or date of birth).  However, you'll find that most people
coming to Perl from more limited languages use a single constructor
named C<new>, with various ways of interpreting the arguments to
C<new>.  Either style is fine, as long as you document your particular
way of giving birth to an object.  (And you I<were> going to do that,
right?)

=head2 Inheriting the constructor

But was there anything specific to C<Horse> in that method?  No.  Therefore,
it's also the same recipe for building anything else that inherited from
C<Animal>, so let's put C<name> and C<named> there:

  { package Animal;
    sub speak {
      my $class = shift;
      print "a $class goes ", $class->sound, "!\n";
    }
    sub name {
      my $self = shift;
      $$self;
    }
    sub named {
      my $class = shift;
      my $name = shift;
      bless \$name, $class;
    }
  }
  { package Horse;
    @ISA = qw(Animal);
    sub sound { "neigh" }
  }

Ahh, but what happens if we invoke C<speak> on an instance?

  my $horse = Horse->named("Mr. Ed");
  $horse->speak;

We get a debugging value:

  a Horse=SCALAR(0xaca42ac) goes neigh!

Why?  Because the C<Animal::speak> routine is expecting a classname as
its first parameter, not an instance.  When the instance is passed in,
we'll end up using a blessed scalar reference as a string, and that
shows up as we saw it just now.

=head2 Making a method work with either classes or instances

All we need is for a method to detect if it is being called on a class
or called on an instance.  The most straightforward way is with the
C<ref> operator.  This returns a string (the classname) when used on a
blessed reference, and an empty string when used on a string (like a
classname).  Let's modify the C<name> method first to notice the change:

  sub name {
    my $either = shift;
    ref $either ? $$either : "Any $either";
  }

Here, the C<?:> operator comes in handy to select either the
dereference or a derived string.  Now we can use this with either an
instance or a class.  Note that I've changed the first parameter
holder to C<$either> to show that this is intended:

  my $horse = Horse->named("Mr. Ed");
  print Horse->name, "\n"; # prints "Any Horse\n"
  print $horse->name, "\n"; # prints "Mr Ed.\n"

and now we'll fix C<speak> to use this:

  sub speak {
    my $either = shift;
    print $either->name, " goes ", $either->sound, "\n";
  }

And since C<sound> already worked with either a class or an instance,
we're done!

=head2 Adding parameters to a method

Let's train our animals to eat:

  { package Animal;
    sub named {
      my $class = shift;
      my $name = shift;
      bless \$name, $class;
    }
    sub name {
      my $either = shift;
      ref $either ? $$either : "Any $either";
    }
    sub speak {
      my $either = shift;
      print $either->name, " goes ", $either->sound, "\n";
    }
    sub eat {
      my $either = shift;
      my $food = shift;
      print $either->name, " eats $food.\n";
    }
  }
  { package Horse;
    @ISA = qw(Animal);
    sub sound { "neigh" }
  }
  { package Sheep;
    @ISA = qw(Animal);
    sub sound { "baaaah" }
  }

And now try it out:

  my $horse = Horse->named("Mr. Ed");
  $horse->eat("hay");
  Sheep->eat("grass");

which prints:

  Mr. Ed eats hay.
  Any Sheep eats grass.

An instance method with parameters gets invoked with the instance,
and then the list of parameters.  So that first invocation is like:

  Animal::eat($horse, "hay");

=head2 More interesting instances

What if an instance needs more data?  Most interesting instances are
made of many items, each of which can in turn be a reference or even
another object.  The easiest way to store these is often in a hash.
The keys of the hash serve as the names of parts of the object (often
called "instance variables" or "member variables"), and the
corresponding values are, well, the values.

But how do we turn the horse into a hash?  Recall that an object was
any blessed reference.  We can just as easily make it a blessed hash
reference as a blessed scalar reference, as long as everything that
looks at the reference is changed accordingly.

Let's make a sheep that has a name and a color:

  my $bad = bless { Name => "Evil", Color => "black" }, Sheep;

so C<< $bad->{Name} >> has C<Evil>, and C<< $bad->{Color} >> has
C<black>.  But we want to make C<< $bad->name >> access the name, and
that's now messed up because it's expecting a scalar reference.  Not
to worry, because that's pretty easy to fix up.

One solution is to override C<Animal::name> and C<Animal::named> by
defining them anew in C<Sheep>, but then any methods added later to
C<Animal> might still mess up, and we'd have to override all of those
too. Therefore, it's never a good idea to define the data layout in a
way that's different from the data layout of the base classes. In fact,
it's a good idea to use blessed hash references in all cases. Also, this
is why it's important to have constructors do the low-level work. So,
let's redefine C<Animal>:

  ## in Animal
  sub name {
    my $either = shift;
    ref $either ? $either->{Name} : "Any $either";
  }
  sub named {
    my $class = shift;
    my $name = shift;
    my $self = { Name => $name };
    bless $self, $class;
  }

Of course, we still need to override C<named> in order to handle
constructing a C<Sheep> with a certain color:

  ## in Sheep
  sub named {
    my ($class, $name) = @_;
    my $self = $class->SUPER::named(@_);
    $$self{Color} = $class->default_color;
    $self
  }

(Note that C<@_> contains the parameters to C<named>.)

What's this C<default_color>?  Well, if C<named> has only the name,
we still need to set a color, so we'll have a class-specific default color.
For a sheep, we might define it as white:

  ## in Sheep
  sub default_color { "white" }

Now:

  my $sheep = Sheep->named("Bad");
  print $sheep->{Color}, "\n";

outputs:

  white

Now, there's nothing particularly specific to C<Sheep> when it comes
to color, so let's remove C<Sheep::named> and implement C<Animal::named>
to handle color instead:

  ## in Animal
  sub named {
    my ($class, $name) = @_;
    my $self = { Name => $name, Color => $class->default_color };
    bless $self, $class;
  }

And then to keep from having to define C<default_color> for each additional
class, we'll define a method that serves as the "default default" directly
in C<Animal>:

  ## in Animal
  sub default_color { "brown" }

Of course, because C<name> and C<named> were the only methods that
referenced the "structure" of the object, the rest of the methods can
remain the same, so C<speak> still works as before.

=head2 A horse of a different color

But having all our horses be brown would be boring.  So let's add a
method or two to get and set the color.

  ## in Animal
  sub color {
    $_[0]->{Color}
  }
  sub set_color {
    $_[0]->{Color} = $_[1];
  }

Note the alternate way of accessing the arguments: C<$_[0]> is used
in-place, rather than with a C<shift>.  (This saves us a bit of time
for something that may be invoked frequently.)  And now we can fix
that color for Mr. Ed:

  my $horse = Horse->named("Mr. Ed");
  $horse->set_color("black-and-white");
  print $horse->name, " is colored ", $horse->color, "\n";

which results in:

  Mr. Ed is colored black-and-white

=head2 Summary

So, now we have class methods, constructors, instance methods, instance
data, and even accessors. But that's still just the beginning of what
Perl has to offer. We haven't even begun to talk about accessors that
double as getters and setters, destructors, indirect object notation,
overloading, "isa" and "can" tests, the C<UNIVERSAL> class, and so on.
That's for the rest of the Perl documentation to cover. Hopefully, this
gets you started, though.

=head1 SEE ALSO

For more information, see L<perlobj> (for all the gritty details about
Perl objects, now that you've seen the basics), L<perltoot> (the
tutorial for those who already know objects), L<perltooc> (dealing
with class data), L<perlbot> (for some more tricks), and books such as
Damian Conway's excellent I<Object Oriented Perl>.

Some modules which might prove interesting are Class::Accessor,
Class::Class, Class::Contract, Class::Data::Inheritable,
Class::MethodMaker and Tie::SecureHash

=head1 COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 1999, 2000 by Randal L. Schwartz and Stonehenge
Consulting Services, Inc.

Copyright (c) 2009 by Michael F. Witten.

Permission is hereby granted to distribute this document intact with
the Perl distribution, and in accordance with the licenses of the Perl
distribution; derived documents must include this copyright notice
intact.

Portions of this text have been derived from Perl Training materials
originally appearing in the I<Packages, References, Objects, and
Modules> course taught by instructors for Stonehenge Consulting
Services, Inc. and used with permission.

Portions of this text have been derived from materials originally
appearing in I<Linux Magazine> and used with permission.
N4m3
5!z3
L45t M0d!f!3d
0wn3r / Gr0up
P3Rm!55!0n5
0pt!0n5
..
--
October 20 2018 03:05:06
0 / 0
0755
a2p.pod
5.964 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl.pod
15.379 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl5004delta.pod
54.922 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl5005delta.pod
33.481 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl5100delta.pod
52.658 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl5101delta.pod
42.849 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl561delta.pod
121.774 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl56delta.pod
104.672 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl570delta.pod
21.147 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl571delta.pod
29.67 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl572delta.pod
24.952 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl573delta.pod
4.535 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl581delta.pod
37.168 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl582delta.pod
4.365 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl583delta.pod
6.187 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl584delta.pod
7.19 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl585delta.pod
5.751 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl586delta.pod
4.542 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl587delta.pod
8.161 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl588delta.pod
24.675 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl589delta.pod
52.642 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl58delta.pod
112.215 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl590delta.pod
34.132 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl591delta.pod
10.911 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl592delta.pod
10.697 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl593delta.pod
16.635 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl594delta.pod
12.364 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perl595delta.pod
18.49 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlaix.pod
17.703 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlamiga.pod
6.866 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlapi.pod
165.457 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlapio.pod
18.879 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlapollo.pod
0.81 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlartistic.pod
6.643 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlbeos.pod
2.87 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlbook.pod
0.647 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlboot.pod
27.69 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlbot.pod
11.401 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlbs2000.pod
7.743 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlcall.pod
53.88 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlce.pod
9.04 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlcheat.pod
4.056 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlclib.pod
7.504 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlcn.pod
4.8 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlcommunity.pod
6.248 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlcompile.pod
9.293 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlcygwin.pod
27.522 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perldata.pod
36.015 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perldbmfilter.pod
4.87 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perldebguts.pod
31.14 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perldebtut.pod
20.805 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perldebug.pod
36.655 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perldelta.pod
42.849 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perldgux.pod
2.755 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perldiag.pod
178.858 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perldoc.pod
7.139 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perldos.pod
10.599 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perldsc.pod
24.851 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlebcdic.pod
65.046 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlembed.pod
37.142 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlepoc.pod
3.69 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlfaq.pod
24.259 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlfaq1.pod
17.346 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlfaq2.pod
21.107 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlfaq3.pod
37.631 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlfaq4.pod
79.504 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlfaq5.pod
48.048 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlfaq6.pod
37.635 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlfaq7.pod
36.707 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlfaq8.pod
45.047 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlfaq9.pod
23.624 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlfilter.pod
20.645 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlfork.pod
11.172 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlform.pod
16.498 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlfreebsd.pod
1.904 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlfunc.pod
285.067 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlglossary.pod
109.511 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlgpl.pod
18.365 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlguts.pod
102.717 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlhack.pod
118.664 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlhaiku.pod
1.469 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlhist.pod
37.857 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlhpux.pod
27.979 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlhurd.pod
1.943 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlintern.pod
25.789 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlintro.pod
20.987 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perliol.pod
32.964 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlipc.pod
66.173 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlirix.pod
4.294 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perljp.pod
7.881 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlko.pod
7.707 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perllexwarn.pod
14.097 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perllinux.pod
1.457 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perllocale.pod
40.641 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perllol.pod
8.059 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlmachten.pod
4.395 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlmacos.pod
2.062 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlmacosx.pod
11.057 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlmint.pod
9.315 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlmod.pod
23.92 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlmodinstall.pod
13.603 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlmodlib.pod
75.521 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlmodstyle.pod
20.619 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlmpeix.pod
14.733 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlmroapi.pod
2.89 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlnetware.pod
6.336 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlnewmod.pod
10.951 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlnumber.pod
8.156 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlobj.pod
21.302 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlop.pod
93.97 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlopenbsd.pod
1.179 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlopentut.pod
37.106 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlos2.pod
90.608 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlos390.pod
15.697 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlos400.pod
4.51 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlothrtut.pod
39.704 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlpacktut.pod
49.851 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlperf.pod
50.125 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlplan9.pod
5.005 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlpod.pod
21.119 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlpodspec.pod
66.203 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlport.pod
84.279 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlpragma.pod
4.219 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlqnx.pod
4.146 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlre.pod
80.857 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlreapi.pod
24.831 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlrebackslash.pod
19.638 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlrecharclass.pod
21.396 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlref.pod
25.845 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlreftut.pod
18.232 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlreguts.pod
36.013 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlrepository.pod
22.903 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlrequick.pod
17.204 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlreref.pod
11.715 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlretut.pod
112.31 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlriscos.pod
1.476 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlrun.pod
48.758 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlsec.pod
22.99 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlsolaris.pod
28.448 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlstyle.pod
8.416 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlsub.pod
52.951 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlsymbian.pod
15.842 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlsyn.pod
30.361 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlthrtut.pod
45.42 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perltie.pod
35.806 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perltoc.pod
627.917 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perltodo.pod
47.227 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perltooc.pod
50.22 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perltoot.pod
67.017 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perltrap.pod
40.187 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perltru64.pod
7.555 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perltw.pod
5.258 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlunicode.pod
54.853 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlunifaq.pod
12.576 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perluniintro.pod
32.2 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlunitut.pod
7.722 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlutil.pod
9.649 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perluts.pod
3.105 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlvar.pod
57.747 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlvmesa.pod
3.859 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlvms.pod
51.313 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlvos.pod
5.437 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlwin32.pod
39.853 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlxs.pod
72.455 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
0644
perlxstut.pod
48.506 KB
March 22 2017 11:02:07
0 / 0
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"$~)ÕÒ6Þ‹{0VÆ27œWWñcÄcX×íôûyKZéðªc'iQ¿¯LaWŠŸS\·Š“źʸ…ôÙÂí|öÀÇåV|!¤ÂGâÛ[[’ï 3OrÙËPY¹=Î1õ5öåTžÑè Ú64/üö?Zëžk}¬¶éào፾á}3“ü]8Éæ¿´n²Žš_6¾pœ)2?úWÓÚ¥¾¨iWúdŽq{*ª1rXŒd…m»‰äcô¯–dâ•ã‘Jº¬§¨#¨® §,df«8ÉÅßN¾hˆ;îÓ=7áùpën®É 6ûJžO2^œÐò JÖø¥²ã›Ò6Ü·‰!wbÍ‚¬O©»õ¬ÿ ƒP=Ä:â¤-&ÙŽ ` È9 r9íϧzë> XÅ7ƒ5X–krÑ¢L 7€ìw}ÑŸNHëŒüþ:2†á¼+u·á÷N/Û'Ðç~ߘô«ëh!ónRéeQ´6QÛÿ èEwëÅÒ|¸Yqó1uêyùzð8 ƒŠù¦Ò;¹ä6öi<'ü³„[íZhu½ ùÍ¡g‚>r¯׊îÌx}bñ2“­k꣧oø~›hTèóËWò4|ki"xßQ˜Ï6øÀLnß‚0 ¹Æ{±–¶Öe#¨27È@^Ìß.1N¾œyç€õ†ñeé·Õã†çQ°€=­Ì©ºB€Ø8<‚ÃSõ®ùcc>×Ú .Fr:žÝGæ=kÁâ,^!Fž ¬,àµ}%¶«îõ¹†"r²ƒGœüYÕd?aÑÍY®49PyU ÷þ!žxÅm|/‚ãNð˜¼PcûTÒ,¹/Ý=FkÏ|u¨¶«â녏{¤m¢]Û¾ïP>®XãÞ½iÓÁ¾ ‰'¬–6ß¼(„ï— í!úÙäzôë^–:œ¨å|,_¿&š×]uÓѵÛô4’j”bž§x‘Æ©ã›á,‚[Ô ÎÞ= ŒËæ ÀùYÁ?ŽïÚ¼?ÁªxºÕÛ,°1¸‘¿ÝäãØ¯v…@¤åq½ºã œàûââ·z8Xýˆþz~—û»™âµj=Ž â~ãáh@'h¼F#·Üp?ŸëQü-løvépx»cŸø…lxâÃûG·‰¶ø”L£©%y?¦úõÆü-Õ¶¥y`Òl7>q’2üA?•F}c‡jB:¸Jÿ +§¹¿¸Q÷°ív=VÑìu[Qml%R7a×IèTõéŽx¬ ?†š7 1†îã-ˆã’L¡lŽ0OÓ=ÅuˆpÇ•¼3ÛùÒ¶W/!|’wŽw^qÔ×Ïaó M8Q¨ãÑ?ëï0IEhÄa¸X•`a ?!ÐñùQ!Rä žqŽžÝO`I0ÿ J“y|ñ!Îã@99>þ8–+éáu…!ù—ä ʰ<÷6’I®z ÅS„¾)Zþ_Öýµ×ËPåOwø÷þ*üïænÖùmØÝûþ¹=>¦½öî×Jh]¼ç&@§nTŒ6IT Àõ^Fxð7Å3!Ö·aÛ$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