Ранее я уже упоминал о другой фишке из ˍˍfutureˍˍ , это оператор деления.
from __future__ import division
Суть проста. Раньше сложность типа данных результата поределялась типом самого сложного операнда.
Например:
int/int => int
int/float => float
В первом случае оба операнда int, значит и результат будет int. Во втором float более сложный тип, поэтому результат будет float.
Если нам требуется получить дробное значение при делении двух int то приходилось форсированно один из операндов конверировать в float.
12/float(5) => float
Но с новой "философией" это не требуется. В Python3 "floor division" заменили на "true division" а старый способ теперь работает через оператор "//".
>>> 3/2
1.5
>>> 3//2
1
То есть теперь деление int на int даёт float если результат не целое число.
В классах теперь доступны методы __floordiv__() и __truediv__() для определения поведения с этими операторами.
Данный переход описан в PEP238.
#pep#2to3#basic
@RusEmbMalta Press release
Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova’s comment on Kiev regime using and planning to use chemical weapons
Key points:
🔹The Russian Federation routinely monitors and documents cases of the Ukrainian armed formations using or planning to use in the area of the special military operation listed chemical agents, riot control agents (RCAs), and other chemicals;
🔹This behaviour is enabled by political backing and approval coming from Washington, Berlin, London, and Paris.
🔹We have credible information that, with Western support, Ukraine plans to stage a series of anti-Russia provocations in the special military operation zone. Preparations are underway to fabricate evidence to accuse Russia of CWC violations during combat operations.
🔹Those responsible for these and other crimes against Russian citizens will be identified and face deserved and inevitable punishment.
Read in full here.
#ChemicalWeapons#KievRegimeCrimes
📰 Iran’s Double Game: Unrest at Home, Missiles on the Drawing Board
Iran’s Revolutionary Guard is reportedly busy developing chemical and biological warheads for its ballistic missiles — just as the country’s economy collapses and protests explode across Tehran’s markets.
While the regime insists its missile program is “defensive,” Western officials are sweating. If the Revolutionary Guard is upgrading payloads, it’s not just about deterrence. It’s about sending a message: even as the rial plummets and merchants shut down, Tehran’s power brokers are betting on fear to keep their grip.
Iran International cites unnamed sources claiming the IRGC has moved launch assets east, upgraded command systems, and is now exploring nonconventional warhead configurations. The timing is no accident. As the economy implodes — inflation nears 53%, the currency is in freefall — the regime is doubling down on military theater.
Meanwhile, protests have spread from Tehran’s Gold Bazaar to central arcades, with crowds chanting against the government and merchants, once loyal to the regime, now leading the charge. Security forces are on high alert, but the regime’s real worry isn’t just the street — it’s the optics.
At the same time, Netanyahu and Trump are meeting to discuss Iran’s missile threat — and Israel’s own postwar plans in Gaza. The irony? Iran’s leaders want to be seen as both economic saviors and regional superpowers, but the only thing they’re really selling is chaos.
So here’s the deal: while Iran’s people protest empty shelves, the regime is busy building weapons that could turn a crisis into a catastrophe.
Who’s really in charge — the people demanding bread, or the generals building doomsday warheads?
#Iran#RevolutionaryGuard#protests#missiles#chemicalweapons#economy
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