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docs/en/docs/advanced/websockets.md
```Python hl_lines="48-52" {!../../../docs_src/websockets/tutorial001.py!} ``` You can receive and send binary, text, and JSON data. ## Try it If your file is named `main.py`, run your application with: <div class="termy"> ```console $ fastapi dev main.py <span style="color: green;">INFO</span>: Uvicorn running on http://127.0.0.1:8000 (Press CTRL+C to quit) ```
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/bigger-applications.md
### Avoid name collisions We are importing the submodule `items` directly, instead of importing just its variable `router`. This is because we also have another variable named `router` in the submodule `users`. If we had imported one after the other, like: ```Python from .routers.items import router from .routers.users import router ```
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docs/en/docs/reference/status.md
# Status Codes You can import the `status` module from `fastapi`: ```python from fastapi import status ``` `status` is provided directly by Starlette. It contains a group of named constants (variables) with integer status codes. For example: * 200: `status.HTTP_200_OK` * 403: `status.HTTP_403_FORBIDDEN` * etc.
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docs/en/docs/fastapi-cli.md
``` </div> That command line program called `fastapi` is **FastAPI CLI**. FastAPI CLI takes the path to your Python program and automatically detects the variable with the FastAPI (commonly named `app`) and how to import it, and then serves it. For production you would use `fastapi run` instead. 🚀
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/debugging.md
```console $ python myapp.py ``` </div> but is not called when another file imports it, like in: ```Python from myapp import app ``` #### More details Let's say your file is named `myapp.py`. If you run it with: <div class="termy"> ```console $ python myapp.py ``` </div>
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docs/en/docs/advanced/openapi-callbacks.md
The process that happens when your API app calls the *external API* is named a "callback". Because the software that the external developer wrote sends a request to your API and then your API *calls back*, sending a request to an *external API* (that was probably created by the same developer).
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/request-forms.md
For example, in one of the ways the OAuth2 specification can be used (called "password flow") it is required to send a `username` and `password` as form fields. The <abbr title="specification">spec</abbr> requires the fields to be exactly named `username` and `password`, and to be sent as form fields, not JSON.
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/dependencies/dependencies-with-yield.md
``` And all of them can use `yield`. In this case `dependency_c`, to execute its exit code, needs the value from `dependency_b` (here named `dep_b`) to still be available. And, in turn, `dependency_b` needs the value from `dependency_a` (here named `dep_a`) to be available for its exit code. === "Python 3.9+" ```Python hl_lines="18-19 26-27" {!> ../../../docs_src/dependencies/tutorial008_an_py39.py!}
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fastapi/encoders.py
Exclude from the output any fields that start with the name `_sa`. This is mainly a hack for compatibility with SQLAlchemy objects, they store internal SQLAlchemy-specific state in attributes named with `_sa`, and those objects can't (and shouldn't be) serialized to JSON. """ ), ] = True, ) -> Any: """ Convert any object to something that can be encoded in JSON.
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docs/en/docs/how-to/sql-databases-peewee.md
Most of the code is actually the same. So, we are going to focus only on the differences. ## File structure Let's say you have a directory named `my_super_project` that contains a sub-directory called `sql_app` with a structure like this: ``` . └── sql_app ├── __init__.py ├── crud.py ├── database.py ├── main.py └── schemas.py
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