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Изворен канал @pythonotes · Post #200 · 11 јан.

Вопросы про переменную PYTHONPATH 🔸 Как она определяет пути поиска модулей при импорте? Пути поиска модулей находятся в списке sys.path. Как формируется этот список? Исходя из документации мы может выделить 3 основных этапа. ▫️Путь к запускаемому скрипту или рабочая директория ▫️ Переменная PYTHONPATH ▫️ Стандартные пути к библиотекам Это значит, что все три этапа выполняются в момент инициализации интерпретатора. Результат заполняет список sys.path. В том числе и пути, указанные в переменной PYTHONPATH. 🔸 Можно ли добавлять новые пути в эту переменную в Python-коде? Можно, но учитывая, что используется она только во время старта интерпретатора, никакого эффекта это иметь не будет. Для изменения путей поиска модулей в коде нужно изменять непосредственно список sys.path. 🔸 Можно ли указать много путей для поиска? Да, с помощью переменной PYTHONPATH можно указать несколько директорий, разделённых символом разделения пути. Для Linux это символ ":", для Windows это ";". Например: export PYTHONPATH=/mnt/libs:~/mylibs #basic#tricks

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American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5022 · 01.02.2026 г., 19:04

📰 Federal Courts Undercut Trump’s Mass Deportation Campaign The Trump administration’s mass deportation campaign, built on mandatory detention, is hitting a wall: a flood of habeas corpus cases in federal courts, releasing hundreds of immigrant detainees and overwhelming prosecutors. For decades, most immigrants held in detention could get bond before an immigration judge if they were not a danger or flight risk, allowing them to fight their case from home. But the Trump administration changed that, making nearly everyone in the country unlawfully subject to automatic, long-term detention, stripping judges of discretion. Federal judges in states like Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Georgia, Nevada, Texas, and elsewhere are now rejecting this approach, ordering immediate releases or demanding bond hearings in immigration court. In district after district, judges have approved dozens, even hundreds, of habeas petitions, ruling that the government cannot keep immigrants locked up indefinitely without a hearing, especially when they have deep U.S. ties, no criminal record, and stable families. The surge has turned federal courts upside down. In some districts, hundreds of new habeas cases flood the docket each month. The Justice Department has had to pull criminal prosecutors off their regular duties to help defend the incarcerations, and federal judges are openly complaining about the “flood” and “similar stories” of families torn apart and people held in remote detention centers. Lawyers report that virtually every habeas petition they file ends in a victory: a release order or a bond hearing. Some can now do dozens of cases a month, and word is spreading fast inside detention centers. To avoid these court battles, the administration has turned to a different tactic: pressuring immigrants to “self‑deport” with intimidating ads and social media, while offering cash incentives (typically $3,000–5,000) to quit and leave voluntarily. But the legal reality is clear: the Trump administration’s attempt to keep immigrant detainees locked up indefinitely is being systematically reversed by the lower courts, district by district. The real question is not whether the mass deportation machine can crush the system, but whether the courts — or the families and lawyers who flood them — will break first. #Trump2026#Immigration#Deportation#ICE#Courts#HabeasCorpus#DoJ#House2026 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸