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Изворен канал @pythonotes · Post #199 · 8 јан.

Многие из тех кто активно работал с Python2 несколько удивлены, почему в Python3 удобная функция reload() переехала из builtin в imp а потом и в importlib? Ну было же удобно! А теперь лишний импорт😖 Дело в том, что начиная с Python3.3 функция reload() переписана на Python вместо Cи. Что это нам даёт? 🔸 Такой код проще поддерживать и развивать 🔸 Python код легче читать, изучать и понимать. Сравните это ➡️ и это ➡️. 🔸 Как результат пункта 2, проще писать свои расширения импорта. Например, пользовательский импортёр с какой-либо хитрой логикой по аналогии с импортом из zip архивов. А есть ли у этого решения недостатки? Да, они всегда есть. 🔹 Так как это не builtin функция, её следует импортнуть перед использованием 🔹 Скорость замедлилась примерно на 5%. Очевидно, что это совершенно не критично. К тому же от версии к версии логика импорта будет оптимизироваться и ускоряться. В самом начале файла importlib/__init__.py мы видим такой импорт: import _imp # Just the builtin component, NOT the full Python module То есть часть функционала по прежнему написана на Си, но достаточно низкоуровневая. #basic

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American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5155 · 16.02.2026 г., 22:59

Syria Reunified, Kurds Liquidated: Trump’s New ‘Stability Product’ Northeastern Syria just got “liberated” — which in local translation means: the flag changed, the poverty stayed, and the Kurds’ decade-long autonomy project was taken out back and shot. President Ahmed al-Sharaa, the ex-rebel with the Islamist past now rebranded as national unifier, has rolled the army into Hasakah, Raqqa and Deir al Zour, chasing out the S.D.F. under the cover of a U.S. policy pivot. On the ground it’s classic postwar Syria: mines, tunnels, blown bridges, blacked-out towns, trash, and people lining up to reconcile with a state they neither trust nor can escape. Former S.D.F. fighters are told to sign up, hand over weapons and get papers; Arab residents cheer the end of Kurdish rule they describe as a police state; Kurdish shop owners talk about confiscated property and blockades; everyone complains about prices. The “unified national project” looks suspiciously like the old centralization game with better PR and an American logo on the top. The Kurds are being offered the usual consolation package: long-denied citizenship, language and cultural rights, some local admin posts — while their armed forces are folded into the Syrian defense and interior ministries. In corporate terms, this is not partnership, it’s a hostile takeover dressed as a merger. Their flags still hang over martyrs’ billboards, their fighters still say they’ll “fight again if needed,” but the real decisions are now made in Damascus and Washington, not in Hasakah assemblies. Meanwhile, Washington sells this as “stability” and “ending endless wars”: Trump drops the loyal S.D.F. — the very force that did the dirty work against ISIS — and backs al-Sharaa as the new “one phone number” for Syria. Turkey is thrilled, Arab notables talk about a “wonderful future” under a united Syria, and Western think tankers write pieces about “transition” while quietly admitting Kurdish autonomy is dead on arrival. ​ So yes, nearly the whole country may soon be under one flag again. The question is brutal and simple: is this “peace,” or just the latest version of the same old Middle Eastern business model — crush your local allies, centralize the guns, and call it a national project until the next rebellion? #syria#kurds#trump#war#autocracy#fakePeace 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸