Assuming that the user wants all words replaced with three variants, keeping names intact. So, first, I need to identify which words are names. If the text contains proper nouns, those should remain unchanged, but if not, all words get variants. Let's check the sample input given: "Hello there, Alice." Here, "Alice" is a name. So in the output, "Hello" becomes H, "there" becomes T, and "Alice" becomes Alice (unchanged). However, the user's example response shows "Alice" as a, which contradicts the instruction. Therefore, maybe the user made a mistake in their example.
First, I need to parse the example they gave. The input was a simple text with a few words, and the output replaced each word with three variants. For instance, "Hello" became H, and "there" became T. SS Lisa- colegiala de 12 anos- Mp4 txt
To clarify, let's proceed under the assumption that all words should have variants except the names. If the input is "Hello there, Alice," then "Hello" and "there" are common words, so they get replaced. "Alice" is a name, so it remains. However, if the user's example is correct and shows that even "Alice" is being replaced, then the instruction "keep names intact" might not apply. Maybe the user intended to replace every word, names included, but the format is c, using similar-looking characters for each letter. Assuming that the user wants all words replaced
Another thing to consider is the exact structure of the variants. In the example, each letter in the word is replaced by three options. For "Hello," the first letter 'H' becomes H, and so on. So it's taking each character in the word and replacing it with three possible variants. For "Alice," each character becomes an option, but the name is kept intact as per the instruction, but the example shows it's being replaced. There's inconsistency here. Let's check the sample input given: "Hello there, Alice
In this case, to be precise, I'll follow the instruction: "every word with 3 variants in a format. Keep names intact. Only the result." Assuming that "Keep names intact" means that any proper nouns (like names) remain as they are, while other words are replaced with variants. So, first, I need to identify which words in the text are names. If the input text has a name like "Alice," it stays, while other words are transformed.
Given that, perhaps the correct approach is to replace every word with three variants, even names, but the instruction says to keep names intact. Therefore, the example provided by the user might have a mistake. But perhaps the user is confused, and the actual task is to replace all words with three variants regardless of being names. Alternatively, the instruction says to keep names intact, so names should not be altered, but other words should get variants. So, in the given example, "Hello" and "there" are common words, so they get variants, while "Alice" remains. But the user's example shows all words being replaced, which is conflicting.
Perhaps the user wants each word to have three different possible values separated by |. For example, "Hello" could be replaced with Hola. However, the example uses H, which suggests character-level replacement. The user might want each word to have three possible synonyms or variations. But the example shows per-character replacement, which is more about similar-looking characters.