Several conservative outlets, however, focused on the hurdles in implementing the accord reached yesterday, saying the United States is "untrustworthy".
The deal clinched in Geneva eases economic sanctions on Iran in exchange for steps to curb its contested nuclear programme.
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The pro-reform Arman daily said, "Zarif must be given a gold medal," while Aftab ran a full-page photo of Iran's foreign minister with the headline: "Smiling diplomat, we thank you."
"This is Iran; Everyone is happy," the reformist Etemad said in a report from the streets of cities across the country as well as social networks, while highlighting that many people had stayed awake through the night into yesterday morning to hear the good news.
The Haft-e Sobh daily said Zarif, Iran's negotiator-in-chief, had become a champion online, with his Facebook post informing his nearly 700,000 followers that a deal had been struck receiving some 165,000 likes.
The reformist Shargh too hailed the deal.
"The sanctions regime has begun to shatter," its headline read, repeating a line by Rouhani and referring to a vast array of punitive measures adopted by the United States and the European Union against Tehran.
Among nearly two dozen main outlets, conservative Kayhan and Vatan-e Emrooz papers adopted a more critical tone.
Kayhan said the agreement had already been violated by "untrustworthy" Washington, pointing to US Secretary of State John Kerry's assertion that nowhere in the deal is Iran's so-called right to enrichment recognised.
It also echoed remarks by Iran's top decision-maker, supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in thanking the nuclear negotiators for not bowing to "the excessive demands" of Western powers.
Vatan-e Emrooz's headline meanwhile read: "Zarif insists, Kerry denies" -- in reference to whether Iran's right to enrichment was enshrined in the accord.
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