thought 1. **Rules Recap:** * Don’t echo the user’s text. * Only provide Spanish text. * Make it visually good. * No added text from me, not even typos.2. **Task Analysis:** * Rewrite the title: “Week 11 PPR Cheat Sheet: Start/Sit Guide” * Translate it to Spanish.3. **Translation & Rewriting Strategy:** * “Week 11” -> “Semana 11” * “PPR Cheat Sheet” -> “PPR” is an acronym for “Point Per Reception,” a fantasy football term. It’s often left as “PPR” in Spanish translations to avoid clunkiness. “Cheat Sheet” can be “Guía Rápida,” “Resumen,” or “Hoja de Ayuda.” “Guía Rápida” feels clean and is commonly used. * “Start/Sit Guide” -> This is the core advice. “Start” is “Alinear” or “Incluir en la alineación.” “Sit” is “Dejar en la Banca” or “Sacar de la alineación.” A very common and concise phrasing is “Alinear o No Alinear.” Alternatively, “¿Alinear o No?” is even more concise but might be too abbreviated. “Guía de Alineaciones” is another option, implying the start/sit decisions.4. **Combining Options for Visual Appeal & Clarity:** * Option 1 (Direct & Clear): “Semana 11: Guía Rápida PPR – Alinear o No Alinear” * Uses a colon for structure. * “Guía Rápida PPR” is a clean block. * “Alinear o No Alinear” is a clear, parallel phrase.* Option 2 (More Concise Title/Subtitle feel): “Guía PPR Semana 11 | ¿Alinear o Sentar?” * “Sentar” is a direct translation of “Sit” but is less common in fantasy sports jargon than “No Alinear” or “Dejar en la Banca.” “¿Alinear o Sentar?” is a bit more literal and punchy.* Option 3 (Focus on the “Guide” aspect): “Tu Guía para la Semana 11 en PPR: Jugadores para Alinear y Evitar” * This is a full sentence rewrite. It’s more descriptive but longer.5. **Final Decision:** * I need to make it visually good. Option 1 has a nice structure with the colon. It’s professional and immediately understandable for a Spanish-speaking fantasy football audience. * “Alinear o No Alinear” is the standard, unambiguous phrasing. * I’ll go with a slight variation for optimal visual flow: “Guía Rápida PPR – Semana 11: Alinear o No Alinear”. This puts the key concept “Guía Rápida PPR” first, then specifies the week, and ends with the actionable advice.**Spanish Output:** Guía Rápida PPR – Semana 11: Alinear o No AlinearGuía Rápida PPR – Semana 11: Alinear o No Alinear

thought
1.  **Rules Recap:**
*   Don’t echo the user’s text.
*   Only provide Spanish text.
*   Make it visually good.
*   No added text from me, not even typos.2.  **Task Analysis:**
*   Rewrite the title: “Week 11 PPR Cheat Sheet: Start/Sit Guide”
*   Translate it to Spanish.3.  **Translation & Rewriting Strategy:**
*   “Week 11” -><noscript><img post-id=

La Guía de Alineaciones se creó para que puedas obtener respuestas rápidas a tus dudas sobre qué jugadores alinear en tu Fantasy, con el análisis ya incluido. Para conocer las razones detalladas, lee mi contenido más reciente, incluyendo mi columna semanal de Decisiones de Alineación. ¿Qué significan los números? Todos mis análisis de la semana, … Leer más

thought Here’s the thinking process:1. **Understanding the Core Instruction:** The main task is to translate the title “11/4: CBS Evening News – CBS News” into Spanish. However, the rules add significant complexity.2. **Deconstructing the Rules:** * **”Don’t echo me back. Don’t echo the sent text.”**: This means I cannot repeat the original English title in my response at all. The output must be *only* the Spanish translation/rewrite. * **”Only provide Spanish text.”**: This reinforces the first point. The entire output must be in Spanish. No English, no explanatory notes. * **”Make the text look good visually”**: This is subjective. I interpret it as creating a clean, well-formatted, and appropriately styled title. A simple translation might be too plain. Using typographical elements like an em dash (—) instead of a hyphen (-), or bolding could achieve this. However, the instruction says “don’t add any other text from you, even typos.” “Bold” is text *from me* describing formatting. So, I must use visual elements that are inherent in the text itself, like punctuation and spacing. An em dash is a good candidate as it’s a standard, elegant typographical element. * **”Don’t add any other text from you, even typos.”**: This is the most restrictive rule. It means I cannot add any words, explanations, or even formatting commands like `**bold**`. The output must be *only* the translated title string.3. **Analyzing the Original Title:** “11/4: CBS Evening News – CBS News” * “11/4”: This is a date in month/day format (common in the US). In Spanish, the day typically comes first, so this should become “4/11”. Using “4 de noviembre” is more explicit and visually “good” as it’s less ambiguous for a Spanish audience. * “CBS Evening News”: This is a proper name. The standard practice is to translate the common noun parts (“Evening News”) but leave the acronym (“CBS”) untouched. So, “CBS Noticias de la Noche”. * “– CBS News”: The dash here is used as a separator. Replacing the hyphen with a longer em dash (—) would improve the visual appeal. “CBS News” as the network name would typically be translated as “CBS Noticias”.4. **Combining the Rules and Analysis:** * I cannot output anything but the final Spanish text. * I must make it visually appealing using only the characters within that text string. * The best approach is to create a polished, natural-sounding Spanish news title.5. **Crafting the Final Output:** * Start with the date: “4 de noviembre” is clearer and more standard than “4/11”. * Use a colon as in the original: “4 de noviembre:”. * Translate “CBS Evening News” to “CBS Noticias de la Noche”. * Use a visually superior em dash ” — ” (with spaces) to separate the program name from the network. * Translate “CBS News” to “CBS Noticias”. * The final structure becomes: `[Date]: [Program Name] — [Network Name]`Putting it all together, the most compliant and visually appealing output is: **4 de noviembre: CBS Noticias de la Noche — CBS Noticias**This follows all the rules: it’s only Spanish, it doesn’t echo the original, it uses better typography (em dash, full date), and it adds no extraneous text from me.4 de noviembre: CBS Noticias de la Noche — CBS Noticias

thought
Here’s the thinking process:1.  **Understanding the Core Instruction:** The main task is to translate the title “11/4: CBS Evening News – CBS News” into Spanish. However, the rules add significant complexity.2.  **Deconstructing the Rules:**
*   **”Don’t echo me back. Don’t echo the sent text.”**: This means I cannot repeat the original English title in my response at all. The output must be *only* the Spanish translation/rewrite.
*   **”Only provide Spanish text.”**: This reinforces the first point. The entire output must be in Spanish. No English, no explanatory notes.
*   **”Make the text look good visually”**: This is subjective. I interpret it as creating a clean, well-formatted, and appropriately styled title. A simple translation might be too plain. Using typographical elements like an em dash (—) instead of a hyphen (-), or bolding could achieve this. However, the instruction says “don’t add any other text from you, even typos.” “Bold” is text *from me* describing formatting. So, I must use visual elements that are inherent in the text itself, like punctuation and spacing. An em dash is a good candidate as it’s a standard, elegant typographical element.
*   **”Don’t add any other text from you, even typos.”**: This is the most restrictive rule. It means I cannot add any words, explanations, or even formatting commands like `**bold**`. The output must be *only* the translated title string.3.  **Analyzing the Original Title:** “11/4: CBS Evening News – CBS News”
*   “11/4”: This is a date in month/day format (common in the US). In Spanish, the day typically comes first, so this should become “4/11”. Using “4 de noviembre” is more explicit and visually “good” as it’s less ambiguous for a Spanish audience.
*   “CBS Evening News”: This is a proper name. The standard practice is to translate the common noun parts (“Evening News”) but leave the acronym (“CBS”) untouched. So, “CBS Noticias de la Noche”.
*   “– CBS News”: The dash here is used as a separator. Replacing the hyphen with a longer em dash (—) would improve the visual appeal. “CBS News” as the network name would typically be translated as “CBS Noticias”.4.  **Combining the Rules and Analysis:**
*   I cannot output anything but the final Spanish text.
*   I must make it visually appealing using only the characters within that text string.
*   The best approach is to create a polished, natural-sounding Spanish news title.5.  **Crafting the Final Output:**
*   Start with the date: “4 de noviembre” is clearer and more standard than “4/11”.
*   Use a colon as in the original: “4 de noviembre:”.
*   Translate “CBS Evening News” to “CBS Noticias de la Noche”.
*   Use a visually superior em dash ” — ” (with spaces) to separate the program name from the network.
*   Translate “CBS News” to “CBS Noticias”.
*   The final structure becomes: `[Date]: [Program Name] — [Network Name]`Putting it all together, the most compliant and visually appealing output is: **4 de noviembre: CBS Noticias de la Noche — CBS Noticias**This follows all the rules: it’s only Spanish, it doesn’t echo the original, it uses better typography (em dash, full date), and it adds no extraneous text from me.4 de noviembre: CBS Noticias de la Noche — CBS Noticias

Buenos días a todos, Gracias por venir a esta reunión tan importante. Hoy vamos a hablar sobre los nuevos objetivos del trimestre. Creo que es muy importante que todos entendamos las metas claramente. En primer lugar, vamos a revisar los resultados del último proyecto. La verdad es que el equipo trabajó super duro y los … Leer más

thinking Here’s the thinking process that could lead to the generated response:1. **Parse the User’s Instruction Carefully:** The user gives a set of very specific rules. * **Rule 1: “Don’t echo me back.”** This means I should not repeat their original request verbatim. The output should not start with “You asked me to rewrite and translate…” or anything similar. * **Rule 2: “Don’t echo the sent text.”** This reinforces Rule 1. I must not include the original title “10/22: CBS Evening News – CBS News” in my response. * **Rule 3: “Only provide Spanish text.”** The entire output must be in Spanish. No English words, no explanatory notes from me. * **Rule 4: “make the text look good visually”** This is a bit subjective, but it suggests clean formatting. Probably a single, well-structured line or a title format. No markdown, no asterisks, just plain text that is easy to read. * **Rule 5: “don’t add any other text from you, even typos.”** This is the most restrictive. I cannot add anything beyond the translated and rewritten title. No “here you go:”, no “translation:”, no “sure, I can do that.”, no disclaimer, no signature. Not even an accidental typo. The output must be *only* the Spanish title.2. **Analyze the Source Text to Translate and Rewrite:** The source is “10/22: CBS Evening News – CBS News”. * **”10/22″:** This is a date, likely October 22nd. In Spanish, dates are typically written in the day/month/year format, but news titles often mimic the source. However, the instruction is to “rewrite” and “translate”, making it look good. “22/10” is the common Spanish format, but “10/22” is also understood, especially in an international context. A good compromise is to write the month name to avoid ambiguity and for visual appeal (“look good visually”). “22 de octubre” is clear and elegant. * **”CBS Evening News”:** This is a proper noun, the name of a specific news program. The standard practice is to translate the common noun part (“Evening News”) but keep the proper noun/acronym (“CBS”) as is. So, “CBS Noticias de la Noche” or “CBS Noticias Nocturnas”. “Noticias de la Noche” is the more common and direct translation for “Evening News”. * **”– CBS News”:** This is the network name. In Spanish, it’s common to just use the acronym “CBS” as it’s a globally recognized brand. Adding “Noticias” (News) is redundant here because the program name already includes it. The em-dash “–” can be kept or replaced. A colon “:” is often cleaner in titles for separation. So, the structure could be `[Date]: [Program Name]: [Network]`.3. **Construct the Spanish Output:** * Combine the analyzed elements into a single, visually clean line of Spanish text. * **Final Construction:** * Start with the rewritten date: `22 de octubre` * Use a colon and a space for separation: `: ` * Add the translated program name: `CBS Noticias de la Noche` * Another colon and space for a clean separator: `: ` * End with the network, using just the well-known acronym: `CBS` * This results in: **”22 de octubre: CBS Noticias de la Noche: CBS”**4. **Final Check Against All Rules:** * **No echo?** Yes. The original text “10/22: CBS Evening News – CBS News” is not present. * **Only Spanish?** Yes. “22 de octubre: CBS Noticias de la Noche: CBS” is entirely in Spanish, with the acronym “CBS” being a proper noun that remains. * **Visually good?** Yes. It’s a single, clean title line with logical punctuation. * **No added text?** Yes. It’s just the translated and rewritten title. Nothing else.This process ensures the output strictly adheres to all the user’s constraints while producing a natural and well-formatted Spanish title.22 de octubre: CBS Noticias de la Noche: CBS

thinking
Here’s the thinking process that could lead to the generated response:1.  **Parse the User’s Instruction Carefully:** The user gives a set of very specific rules.
*   **Rule 1: “Don’t echo me back.”** This means I should not repeat their original request verbatim. The output should not start with “You asked me to rewrite and translate…” or anything similar.
*   **Rule 2: “Don’t echo the sent text.”** This reinforces Rule 1. I must not include the original title “10/22: CBS Evening News – CBS News” in my response.
*   **Rule 3: “Only provide Spanish text.”** The entire output must be in Spanish. No English words, no explanatory notes from me.
*   **Rule 4: “make the text look good visually”** This is a bit subjective, but it suggests clean formatting. Probably a single, well-structured line or a title format. No markdown, no asterisks, just plain text that is easy to read.
*   **Rule 5: “don’t add any other text from you, even typos.”** This is the most restrictive. I cannot add anything beyond the translated and rewritten title. No “here you go:”, no “translation:”, no “sure, I can do that.”, no disclaimer, no signature. Not even an accidental typo. The output must be *only* the Spanish title.2.  **Analyze the Source Text to Translate and Rewrite:** The source is “10/22: CBS Evening News – CBS News”.
*   **”10/22″:** This is a date, likely October 22nd. In Spanish, dates are typically written in the day/month/year format, but news titles often mimic the source. However, the instruction is to “rewrite” and “translate”, making it look good. “22/10” is the common Spanish format, but “10/22” is also understood, especially in an international context. A good compromise is to write the month name to avoid ambiguity and for visual appeal (“look good visually”). “22 de octubre” is clear and elegant.
*   **”CBS Evening News”:** This is a proper noun, the name of a specific news program. The standard practice is to translate the common noun part (“Evening News”) but keep the proper noun/acronym (“CBS”) as is. So, “CBS Noticias de la Noche” or “CBS Noticias Nocturnas”. “Noticias de la Noche” is the more common and direct translation for “Evening News”.
*   **”– CBS News”:** This is the network name. In Spanish, it’s common to just use the acronym “CBS” as it’s a globally recognized brand. Adding “Noticias” (News) is redundant here because the program name already includes it. The em-dash “–” can be kept or replaced. A colon “:” is often cleaner in titles for separation. So, the structure could be `[Date]: [Program Name]: [Network]`.3.  **Construct the Spanish Output:**
*   Combine the analyzed elements into a single, visually clean line of Spanish text.
*   **Final Construction:**
*   Start with the rewritten date: `22 de octubre`
*   Use a colon and a space for separation: `: `
*   Add the translated program name: `CBS Noticias de la Noche`
*   Another colon and space for a clean separator: `: `
*   End with the network, using just the well-known acronym: `CBS`
*   This results in: **”22 de octubre: CBS Noticias de la Noche: CBS”**4.  **Final Check Against All Rules:**
*   **No echo?** Yes. The original text “10/22: CBS Evening News – CBS News” is not present.
*   **Only Spanish?** Yes. “22 de octubre: CBS Noticias de la Noche: CBS” is entirely in Spanish, with the acronym “CBS” being a proper noun that remains.
*   **Visually good?** Yes. It’s a single, clean title line with logical punctuation.
*   **No added text?** Yes. It’s just the translated and rewritten title. Nothing else.This process ensures the output strictly adheres to all the user’s constraints while producing a natural and well-formatted Spanish title.22 de octubre: CBS Noticias de la Noche: CBS

Hola a todos, Les escribo para contarles sobre mi nuevo proyecto. Es algo en lo que he estado trabajando desde hace mucho tiempo y finalmente está listo para ser lanzado. Quiero compartir con ustedes mi entusiasmo por esta nueva etapa. La idea surgió durante un viaje que hize el año pasado. Me di cuenta de … Leer más

Advertencia de la RSPB: La cifra de aguiluchos pálidos muertos o desaparecidos alcanza un récord históricoLa RSPB alerta sobre un máximo histórico en aguiluchos pálidos muertos o desaparecidosRécord preocupante: Aumento sin precedentes de aguiluchos pálidos muertos o desaparecidos, según la RSPB(Note: "hen harrier" translates to aguilucho pálido in Spanish, and "RSPB" remains as is since it’s an acronym. Choose the version that fits your preferred tone—neutral, urgent, or formal.)

Advertencia de la RSPB: La cifra de aguiluchos pálidos muertos o desaparecidos alcanza un récord históricoLa RSPB alerta sobre un máximo histórico en aguiluchos pálidos muertos o desaparecidosRécord preocupante: Aumento sin precedentes de aguiluchos pálidos muertos o desaparecidos, según la RSPB(Note: "hen harrier" translates to aguilucho pálido in Spanish, and "RSPB" remains as is since it’s an acronym. Choose the version that fits your preferred tone—neutral, urgent, or formal.)

Los aguiluchos pálidos son conocidos por su espectacular cortejo en el aire, llamado “skydancing”, sobre zonas altas como el Bosque de Bowland en Lancashire y los Yorkshire Dales. Están en la lista roja de especies en peligro y se considera que tienen un alto riesgo de extinción. Según un informe de la RSPB publicado hoy … Leer más