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  1. docs/en/docs/advanced/generate-clients.md

    !!! tip
        Notice the autocompletion for `name` and `price`, that was defined in the FastAPI application, in the `Item` model.
    
    You will have inline errors for the data that you send:
    
    <img src="/img/tutorial/generate-clients/image04.png">
    
    The response object will also have autocompletion:
    
    <img src="/img/tutorial/generate-clients/image05.png">
    
    ## FastAPI App with Tags
    
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  2. docs/en/docs/benchmarks.md

    * **Uvicorn**:
        * Will have the best performance, as it doesn't have much extra code apart from the server itself.
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  3. docs/en/docs/alternatives.md

    What inspired **FastAPI**, how it compares to alternatives and what it learned from them.
    
    ## Intro
    
    **FastAPI** wouldn't exist if not for the previous work of others.
    
    There have been many tools created before that have helped inspire its creation.
    
    I have been avoiding the creation of a new framework for several years. First I tried to solve all the features covered by **FastAPI** using many different frameworks, plug-ins, and tools.
    
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  4. docs/en/docs/tutorial/testing.md

    ## Separating tests
    
    In a real application, you probably would have your tests in a different file.
    
    And your **FastAPI** application might also be composed of several files/modules, etc.
    
    ### **FastAPI** app file
    
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  5. docs/en/docs/advanced/dataclasses.md

    ## Dataclasses in Nested Data Structures
    
    You can also combine `dataclasses` with other type annotations to make nested data structures.
    
    In some cases, you might still have to use Pydantic's version of `dataclasses`. For example, if you have errors with the automatically generated API documentation.
    
    In that case, you can simply swap the standard `dataclasses` with `pydantic.dataclasses`, which is a drop-in replacement:
    
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  6. docs/en/docs/tutorial/response-model.md

        ```
    
    This will make FastAPI skip the response model generation and that way you can have any return type annotations you need without it affecting your FastAPI application. 🤓
    
    ## Response Model encoding parameters
    
    Your response model could have default values, like:
    
    === "Python 3.10+"
    
        ```Python hl_lines="9  11-12"
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  7. docs/en/docs/tutorial/path-params.md

    Several of these are explored in the next chapters of the tutorial.
    
    ## Order matters
    
    When creating *path operations*, you can find situations where you have a fixed path.
    
    Like `/users/me`, let's say that it's to get data about the current user.
    
    And then you can also have a path `/users/{user_id}` to get data about a specific user by some user ID.
    
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  8. docs/en/docs/advanced/behind-a-proxy.md

    And the proxy would be **"stripping"** the **path prefix** on the fly before transmitting the request to the app server (probably Uvicorn via FastAPI CLI), keeping your application convinced that it is being served at `/app`, so that you don't have to update all your code to include the prefix `/api/v1`.
    
    Up to here, everything would work as normally.
    
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  9. docs/en/docs/deployment/concepts.md

    In this case, it would be better to get **one extra server** and run some processes on it so that they all have **enough RAM and CPU time**.
    
    There's also the chance that for some reason you have a **spike** of usage of your API. Maybe it went viral, or maybe some other services or bots start using it. And you might want to have extra resources to be safe in those cases.
    
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  10. docs/en/docs/tutorial/security/first-steps.md

    # Security - First Steps
    
    Let's imagine that you have your **backend** API in some domain.
    
    And you have a **frontend** in another domain or in a different path of the same domain (or in a mobile application).
    
    And you want to have a way for the frontend to authenticate with the backend, using a **username** and **password**.
    
    We can use **OAuth2** to build that with **FastAPI**.
    
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