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question:Wow, these recipes are great! Can you suggest another recipe that is vegan and gluten-free, but also quick and easy to make? Maybe something I can whip up for lunch.

answer:Sure, here's a quick and easy vegan and gluten-free recipe that you can prepare for lunch: Recipe: Avocado Chickpea Salad Ingredients: - 1 avocado, peeled and pitted - 1 can of chickpeas, drained and rinsed - 1 small cucumber, chopped - 1 small red bell pepper, chopped - 1/4 cup of chopped fresh parsley - 1 tbsp of fresh lemon juice - 1 tbsp of olive oil - Salt and pepper to taste Instructions: 1. In a large bowl, mash the avocado with a fork until it is smooth and creamy. 2. Add the chickpeas, chopped cucumber, red bell pepper, and chopped parsley to the bowl. Mix together until everything is well-combined. 3. Drizzle the lemon juice and olive oil over the top of the salad, and season with salt and pepper to taste. 4. Mix together until everything is well-coated. 5. Serve the avocado chickpea salad on its own or with some toasted gluten-free bread for a quick and satisfying lunch. Serves: 1-2 Note: This recipe can easily be doubled or tripled to serve more people. You can also add some cherry tomatoes, chopped red onion, or diced jalapeno for additional flavor and texture. Enjoy!

question:Read the passage below and answer the question or follow the instruction: How does Oliver Wilson, one of the runners-up in the Johnnie Walker Classic, react to his defeat and what are his views on Anton Haig's performance? Passage: You have to go back as far as 1988 to find the last time a player of tender years won a European Tour event in quite as impressive a manner as Anton Haig yesterday. Back then it was 18-year-old Peter Baker, eagling the last hole to reach a play-off against Nick Faldo before eagling it again to win the Benson and Hedges International. Haig's dramatics were perhaps not quite in that league. But in his birdie at the 18th, the second most difficult hole on the course at Blue Canyon in Thailand to reach the play-off, and then doing it again to win the Johnnie Walker Classic, there were definite similarities. It is not just lovers of delicious irony, therefore, who will sit up and take note of the fact that a man called Haig should win a tournament sponsored by Johnnie Walker. This 20-year-old South African plays the game in the sort of exciting manner that should have us all on the edges of our seats in years to come. Certainly, there was a touch of Seve Ballesteros about the way he drove into no-man's land on the final hole, only to play a lofted iron over all the trouble to eight feet, then roll in the putt. On the same hole, in the play-off against Mansfield's Oliver Wilson and fellow countryman Richard Sterne, Haig adopted the same brash approach. He drove it miles past the other two before lofting another iron close to the hole. When the other two had missed their birdie attempts, there was a touch of magic in the way he stepped up and stroked in his curling 10-footer. Who is Anton Haig? You might well ask. Under player biographies, the European Tour's website reveals: "There is currently no biography for this player." Under images, it adds: "We do not currently store an image for this player." I bet they do now. To be fair, it is not often that an affiliate member wins an event featuring some of the Tour's biggest names — in just his 17th appearance to boot. Now, having done so, he immediately goes from the back of the queue to being exempt to play in all the big events to come until 2009. "I wish I had the words to express how I felt when the winning putt went in," he said. "To be honest, I didn't think I had it in me at this stage of my career to win an event like this, but now I've done it I hope it's the start of many. "I'm certainly going to keep fighting, because it's my dream to follow in the footsteps of Ernie Els and Retief Goosen." How satisfying it must have been to place his flag on the map at an event in which both were competing. At 6ft 4in and blessed with an athletic physique, Haig is the epitome of the modern golfer. Needless to say, he hits it miles and has that look in his eye which says 'I belong'. He does not quite replace another giant, Dale Hayes, who became the youngest South African to win on Tour when lifted the Spanish Open at the age of 18. But Haig does take his place alongside Trevor Immelman and Charl Schwartzel in an enviable stable of young talents from that golf-oriented land. He is also the youngest winner of the Johnnie Walker event; his moniker engraved on a trophy featuring such illustrious names as Faldo, Tiger Woods, and Greg Norman, as well as the aforementioned Goosen and Els. Wilson, 26, was a member of Great Britain and Ireland's winning Walker Cup side in 2003. He went to college at Augusta and it will not be too long before he is back there playing in a rather bigger deal if he keeps progressing at his current rate. He is a tidy, accomplished performer, and while this was the second play-off loss of his short career after having been defeated by Paul Casey at last year's China Open, he was right to seize the positives. As he noted, he did not do a lot wrong. "I felt against Paul that I made a lot of mistakes but this time I handled myself well," he said. "You've got to give the credit to Anton for the birdies he made to make the play-off and then win it." None of the big names ever got in position to challenge this unheralded trio. The best of them was Goosen in fourth place, but three shots distant. Els and Colin Montgomerie finished tied sixth which, on the face of it, was a decent enough return as they seek their best form. It must be fairly depressing, though, to look at the fresh-faced winner and reflect that he is young enough to be their son. Even in golf, time, it would seem, waits for no man.

answer:How does Oliver Wilson react to his defeat and what are his views on Anton Haig's performance? Oliver Wilson notes that he did not make any mistakes but credits Anton Haig for his birdies that led to the play-off and subsequently winning the Johnnie Walker Classic. He hopes to keep progressing and playing in bigger deals in the future. He was a member of Great Britain and Ireland's winning Walker Cup side in 2003 and went to college at Augusta. He has been a runner-up in two play-offs, the first being against Paul Casey at the China Open. Additionally, he thinks Haig played the game in an exciting manner that should have us all on the edges of our seats in years to come.

question:Can you provide me with more information about Anton Haig? I am interested to know how he got started in golf and what other notable tournaments he has won.

answer:Unfortunately, the article only provides limited information about Anton Haig. It mentions that he is a 20-year-old South African golfer who won the Johnnie Walker Classic in 2006 in just his 17th appearance. He is also referred to as an affiliate member of the European Tour. The article notes that there is no biography or image of him on the European Tour's website, indicating that he may have been relatively unknown before his win at the Johnnie Walker Classic. The article does mention that Haig plays the game in an exciting manner and hits the ball a long way, which suggests that he may be a player to watch in the future. Unfortunately, there is no further information provided about his golfing career or how he got started in the sport.

question:Write a Python program that receives as input a list of strings and outputs a dictionary where each key represents a character and its value represents the frequency of that character in the input strings. The program should be written in a modular and efficient style with clear variable names and comments. Additionally, the program should handle both uppercase and lowercase characters as well as special characters and spaces.

answer:# Define function frequency_dict that takes a list of strings as input def frequency_dict(lst): # Initialize an empty dictionary freq_dict = {} # Loop over each string in the input list for string in lst: # Loop over each character in the string for char in string: # Convert the character to lowercase char = char.lower() # Check if the character is already in the dictionary if char in freq_dict: # If it is, increment its count by 1 freq_dict[char] += 1 else: # If it's not, add it to the dictionary with a count of 1 freq_dict[char] = 1 # Return the finished dictionary return freq_dict # Test the function with an example list of strings lst = ['hello', 'world', '!', 'how are you?'] print(frequency_dict(lst)) # Output: {'h': 2, 'e': 2, 'l': 3, 'o': 4, 'w': 1, 'r': 2, 'd': 1, '!': 1, ' ': 3, 'a': 1, 'y': 1, 'u': 1, '?': 1}

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