Opaque predicate

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In computer programming, an opaque predicate is a predicate, an expression that evaluates to either "true" or "false", for which the outcome is known by the programmer a priori, but which, for a variety of reasons, still needs to be evaluated at run time.[1] Opaque predicates have been used as watermarks, as they will be identifiable in a program's executable.[2] They can also be used to prevent an overzealous optimizer from optimizing away a portion of a program. Another use is in obfuscating the control or dataflow of a program to make reverse engineering harder.

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  2. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".

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