here you are vs think nothing of it

here you are

phrase
  • Said when handing something over to someone or doing a favour to them, usually to draw the recipient's attention to the exchange; equivalent to “thank you” when receiving something. 

think nothing of it

phrase
  • A polite way to dismiss thanks as unnecessary 

How often have the words here you are and think nothing of it occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )