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.github/ISSUE_TEMPLATE/config.yml
- name: Feature Request about: To suggest an idea or ask about a feature, please start with a question saying what you would like to achieve. There might be a way to do it already. url: https://github.com/tiangolo/fastapi/discussions/categories/questions - name: Show and tell about: Show what you built with FastAPI or to be used with FastAPI. url: https://github.com/tiangolo/fastapi/discussions/categories/show-and-tell
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/response-model.md
### FastAPI Data Filtering Now, for FastAPI, it will see the return type and make sure that what you return includes **only** the fields that are declared in the type.
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docs/en/docs/alternatives.md
This decoupling of parts, and being a "microframework" that could be extended to cover exactly what is needed was a key feature that I wanted to keep. Given the simplicity of Flask, it seemed like a good match for building APIs. The next thing to find was a "Django REST Framework" for Flask. !!! check "Inspired **FastAPI** to"
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/static-files.md
## Details The first `"/static"` refers to the sub-path this "sub-application" will be "mounted" on. So, any path that starts with `"/static"` will be handled by it. The `directory="static"` refers to the name of the directory that contains your static files. The `name="static"` gives it a name that can be used internally by **FastAPI**.
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docs/en/docs/deployment/versions.md
```txt fastapi==0.45.0 ``` that would mean that you would use exactly the version `0.45.0`. Or you could also pin it with: ```txt fastapi>=0.45.0,<0.46.0 ``` that would mean that you would use the versions `0.45.0` or above, but less than `0.46.0`, for example, a version `0.45.2` would still be accepted.
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/first-steps.md
``` The `@app.get("/")` tells **FastAPI** that the function right below is in charge of handling requests that go to: * the path `/` * using a <abbr title="an HTTP GET method"><code>get</code> operation</abbr> !!! info "`@decorator` Info" That `@something` syntax in Python is called a "decorator". You put it on top of a function. Like a pretty decorative hat (I guess that's where the term came from).
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docs/pl/docs/index.md
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docs/it/docs/index.md
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docs/en/docs/advanced/generate-clients.md
You can see those schemas because they were declared with the models in the app. That information is available in the app's **OpenAPI schema**, and then shown in the API docs (by Swagger UI). And that same information from the models that is included in OpenAPI is what can be used to **generate the client code**. ### Generate a TypeScript Client Now that we have the app with the models, we can generate the client code for the frontend.
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/security/first-steps.md
All the security utilities that integrate with OpenAPI (and the automatic API docs) inherit from `SecurityBase`, that's how **FastAPI** can know how to integrate them in OpenAPI. ## What it does It will go and look in the request for that `Authorization` header, check if the value is `Bearer ` plus some token, and will return the token as a `str`.
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