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%e3%82%ab%e3%83%aa%e3%83%93%e3%82%a2%e3%83%b3%e3%82%b3%e3%83%a0 — 062212-055

So taking E3 (0xEB) as first byte, first byte & 0x0F is 0x0B. Then second byte 82 & 0x3F is 0x02. Third byte ab & 0x3F is 0xAB. So code point is (0x0B << 12) | (0x02 << 6) | 0xAB = (0xB000) | 0x0200 | 0xAB = 0xB2AB.

%E3 is hex for decimal 227. %82 is 130. %AB is 171. Wait, that might not be the right way. Actually, in UTF-8 encoding, these bytes represent a single Unicode character. The sequence E3 82 AB in UTF-8 is the Kanji character for "カルビ". Wait, let me confirm. So taking E3 (0xEB) as first byte, first byte & 0x0F is 0x0B

E3 in hex is 227, 82 is 130, AB is 171. So the bytes are 0xEB, 0x82, 0xAB. In UTF-8, three-byte sequences are for code points from U+0800 to U+FFFF. The first three bytes for "カ" (k katakana ka) should be 0xE381AB? Wait, maybe I need to refer to a Japanese encoding table. So code point is (0x0B &lt;&lt; 12) |

For E3 82 AB → "カ" E3 83 B2 → "リ" E3 83 B3 → "ビ" E3 82 A1 → "ア" E3 83 B3 → "ン" E3 82 B3 → "コ" E3 83 A0 → "モ" %AB is 171

Starting with %E3%82%AB. Let me convert each of these sequences to ASCII.