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Table 10 Results of non-conditional samples

From: Transforming the generative pretrained transformer into augmented business text writer

Sample

Machine generated text

Sample4:Topic Retailing

Production are not the same as production at a retail store like you are likely to see at the Superstore. I recently did a bit of testing for this.You Can’t Buy This There are two types of products that can make it through the Superstore checkout process. The first are the items that are sold using the same pricing structure as the retail store. For example, the price for the T-Shirt above only goes up $0.75 with the same color. All I had to do was go to the Superstore and double check my shirt price with the same information as I use to determine if my T-Shirt cost me half what it cost on the same item in the Retail Store. The T-Shirt above, when bought online, has been $0.75 up charge, but on sale is $0.85 for the same size of shirt (you can see why the $0.75 difference is so important!). The second type of product that can help you make it through the checkout process are items with the same price that you’ll find on the retail store. This is usually with items like apparel. For example, the same shirt is $.25 on the Superstore (a T-shirt cost me $0.85 on the Retail Store for the same size of Shirt), as long as they look the same they’re actually a bargain. If you’re a Clothing shopper and shop your clothing online, you’d probably get the price of those same garments for $0.75. In my opinion, the Superstore prices for the same items are more consistent, so I’ve decided to include them. To find the Superstore price for Clothing, you need to purchase a Clothing App item online, take the price as your price, then click the purchase button. You should then follow the steps above to determine the price for that item. A good starting point would be the same price that you pay for the Clothing App item in the Retail Store. Here’s an example of the Clothing App item that I would purchase on the Retail Store. The Shirt above, I bought for $27 online.If you purchase this on the Retail Store, $27 would be the price you’d pay online: $37.99. If you’d purchased it on the Superstore it would be $0.80. I would take my clothing price and multiply it by the retail value of the Shirt (i.e. $0.80 is what I think the T-shirt is on sale at the Superstore). I would assume this will be the same price as my T-Shirt. To do this, I just have to multiply the actual price by my price, then subtract my retail value from my Retail Store price to create a final price of $0.40 for the T-shirt. As you can see, my total Clothing App price is $38.50. To keep track When you’re shopping online, take in one value from each App item for those two different sizes of the Shirt (the same ones) then calculate that value and convert to a per-item price for the product you’re looking at while shopping. The final price should be that. So let’s say that we have the Shirt below for $25 that we think would be the same $25 price for the same Shirt on the Retail Store. After we calculated the per-item value for the Shirt, we would add $0.80 to our total clothing price for that T-Shirt to calculate our final price. In this case, that final price would be $0.80. This is the final value of that T-Shirt—$0.80

  1. Automatic output generated by the trained model