__future__
frequently appears in Python modules. I do not understand what __future__
is for and how/when to use it even after reading the Python's __future__
doc.
Can anyone explain with examples?
A few answers regarding the basic usage of __future__
I've received seemed correct.
However, I need to understand one more thing regarding how __future__
works:
The most confusing concept for me is how a current python release includes features for future releases, and how a program using a feature from a future release can be be compiled successfully in the current version of Python.
I am guessing that the current release is packaged with potential features for the future. However, the features are available only by using __future__
because they are not the current standard. Let me know if I am right.
With __future__
module's inclusion, you can slowly be accustomed to incompatible changes or to such ones introducing new keywords.
E.g., for using context managers, you had to do from __future__ import with_statement
in 2.5, as the with
keyword was new and shouldn't be used as variable names any longer. In order to use with
as a Python keyword in Python 2.5 or older, you will need to use the import from above.
Another example is
from __future__ import division
print 8/7 # prints 1.1428571428571428
print 8//7 # prints 1
Without the __future__
stuff, both print
statements would print 1
.
The internal difference is that without that import, /
is mapped to the __div__()
method, while with it, __truediv__()
is used. (In any case, //
calls __floordiv__()
.)
Apropos print
: print
becomes a function in 3.x, losing its special property as a keyword. So it is the other way round.
>>> print
>>> from __future__ import print_function
>>> print
<built-in function print>
>>>