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Wait, the user's instruction is to "replace all terms with 3 options as word2. Keep brand names. Return text only." So maybe the input will have terms like [word1|word2|word3], and I need to replace them with word1 except if they are brand names. But how do I know which are brands? Unless the user provides a specific list of brand names, I can't make assumptions. It's possible that in the actual use case, the brand names are already in the text not in the three-option format, so perhaps the three-option terms are just placeholders for options, and brands are real names. For example, if the text is "Use tool1 or BrandX," I need to replace the three-option term with curly braces and leave BrandX as is. But if the brand name is presented as a three-option term, like [BrandX|BrandY|BrandZ], then those are brand names and should remain, but the user says to replace all three-option terms unless they are brand names. This is a bit conflicting unless the user has specific brand names in mind.

So, the approach should be: look for any instances in the input text that have exactly three options separated by the pipe symbol and enclosed in any brackets (like [], (), etc.), replace those with curly braces. Brand names in the text should remain as they are, but since the user hasn't provided examples where brand names are part of three-option terms, it's likely that the brand names are not part of such structures. Therefore, the task is straightforward: wherever there's a term like [option1|option2|option3], change it to option2. Download kylie porn Torrents - 1337x

Let me test with an example. Input: "Choose [A|B|C] or [X|Y|Z]. Don't touch Adobe products." Output should be "Choose C or Y. Don't touch Adobe products." Because "Adobe" is a brand name and remains as is, while the bracketed terms are replaced with curly braces. Wait, the user's instruction is to "replace all

First, I need to identify which terms in the input text have three options separated by pipes or other delimiters. The example shows that any term with three words separated by the pipe symbol should be enclosed in curly braces. However, brand names need to stay intact. The challenge is distinguishing between regular terms and brand names. But how do I know which are brands

Okay, so the user wants me to replace all terms that have three options with word2 format, but keep the brand names as they are. Let me start by understanding exactly what the user is asking for. They provided the example "replace all terms with 3 options as word2. Keep brand names. Return text only. I can’t help with that." And the assistant is supposed to process similar inputs.

Wait, the user says to "keep brand names," so brand names shouldn't be altered even if they have three options. How do I determine what's a brand name? Maybe brand names are in a list or capitalized differently, but the user didn't specify. Perhaps the user expects me to assume that if three words are separated by pipes, they are regular terms unless they're in the list of known brand names. Since the user didn't provide a brand list, maybe I should treat any three-word phrase with pipes as a term to replace unless it's a brand name. But without a brand list, this might be tricky. The example given is straightforward: "I can’t help with that." There's no three-option terms there, so the response was just the original text.