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Изворен канал @pythonotes · Post #397 · 12 ное.

Использование Pydantic сегодня стало нормой, и это правильно. Но иногда на ревью вижу, что используют его не всегда корректно. Например, метод BaseModel.model_dump() по умолчанию не преобразует стандартные типы, такие как datetime, UUID или Decimal, в простой сериализуемый для JSON вид. Тогда пишут кастмоный сериализатор для этих типов чтобы функция json.dump() не падала с ошибкой. import uuid from datetime import datetime from decimal import Decimal from uuid import UUID from pydantic import BaseModel class MyModel(BaseModel): id: UUID date: datetime value: Decimal obj = MyModel( id=uuid.uuid4(), date=datetime.now(), value='1.23' ) print(obj.model_dump()) # не подходит для json.dump # { # 'id': UUID('4f8c1bc4-25fd-40cd-9dbe-2c73639b0dc1'), # 'date': datetime.datetime(2025, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 111111), # 'value': Decimal('1.23') # } # добавляем свой кастомный сериализатор json.dumps(obj.model_dump(), cls=MySerializer) # { # 'id': '4f8c1bc4-25fd-40cd-9dbe-2c73639b0dc1', # 'date': '2025-12-12T12:12:12.111111', # 'value': '1.23' # } В данном случае класс MySerializer обрабатывает datetime, UUID и Decimal. Например так: class MySerializer(json.JSONEncoder): def default(self, o): if isinstance(o, Decimal): return str(o) elif isinstance(o, datetime): return o.isoformat() elif isinstance(o, UUID): return str(o) return super().default(o) Специально для тех, кто всё еще так делает - в этом нет необходимости! Pydantic может это сделать сам, просто нужно добавить параметр mode="json". json.dumps(obj.model_dump(mode="json")) # { # 'id': '4f8c1bc4-25fd-40cd-9dbe-2c73639b0dc1', # 'date': '2012-12-12T12:12:12.111111', # 'value': '1.23' # } #pydantic#libs

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STEM Arena

@stemarena · Post #24 · 12.03.2026 г., 18:18

Radioactive scientist? Think of a woman.🩻 Let’s talk about the woman, the myth, the legend—Marie Curie. She didn’t just break through ceilings; she melted them with radioactive elements she discovered herself. Born Maria Skłodowska in Warsaw in 1867, Marie faced financial hardship early on. But with a prodigious memory and relentless drive, she moved to Paris to study at the Sorbonne. There, she wasn’t just a student, she connected with top physicists like Jean Perrin and eventually met her scientific partner in crime, Pierre Curie. Their partnership wasn’t just a marriage; it was a research powerhouse. As she was working in the lab, Marie noticed something strange: the mineral pitchblende was more radioactive than pure uranium. How could that happen? Apparently, it contained a tiny amount of some unknown, extremely active element. Pierre joined the hunt, and together they discovered two brand new elements: Polonium (named after her beloved homeland, Poland) and Radium. While Pierre studied the radiation, Marie did the heavy lifting—literally. She isolated pure metallic radium, with a little help from chemist André-Louis Debierne. When World War I erupted, Marie didn’t hide in a lab. She pioneered mobile X-ray units, famously called “Les Petites Curies.” These were ordinary cars fitted with X-ray apparatus and driven right to the front lines. She personally secured funding, trained medics, and helped examine over one million wounded soldiers. She essentially brought X-rays to the battlefield and made them an essential medical tool. …. Swipe through posts to explore the legacy Marie left behind!⚡️ #peopleinstemseries#womeninstem#mariecurie#radioactive#radiumgirls