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docs/en/docs/how-to/separate-openapi-schemas.md
In fact, in some cases, it will even have **two JSON Schemas** in OpenAPI for the same Pydantic model, for input and output, depending on if they have **default values**. Let's see how that works and how to change it if you need to do that. ## Pydantic Models for Input and Output Let's say you have a Pydantic model with default values, like this one:
Registered: Sun Nov 03 07:19:11 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Sat Oct 26 16:43:54 UTC 2024 - 4.2K bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/en/docs/advanced/security/oauth2-scopes.md
/// danger For simplicity, here we are just adding the scopes received directly to the token. But in your application, for security, you should make sure you only add the scopes that the user is actually able to have, or the ones you have predefined. /// {* ../../docs_src/security/tutorial005_an_py310.py hl[156] *} ## Declare scopes in *path operations* and dependencies
Registered: Sun Nov 03 07:19:11 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Tue Oct 29 11:02:16 UTC 2024 - 13.1K bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/en/docs/tutorial/response-status-code.md
* **`300`** and above are for "Redirection". Responses with these status codes may or may not have a body, except for `304`, "Not Modified", which must not have one. * **`400`** and above are for "Client error" responses. These are the second type you would probably use the most. * An example is `404`, for a "Not Found" response.
Registered: Sun Nov 03 07:19:11 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Mon Oct 28 11:13:18 UTC 2024 - 3.9K bytes - Viewed (0) -
cmd/erasure-healing-common.go
} for _, count := range vidMap { // do we have enough common versions // that have enough quorum to satisfy // the etag. if count >= quorum { return etags } } return make([]string, len(partsMetadata)) } // Extracts list of times from FileInfo slice and returns, skips // slice elements which have errors.
Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Thu Oct 31 22:10:24 UTC 2024 - 12.7K bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/en/docs/tutorial/security/oauth2-jwt.md
Using these ideas, JWT can be used for way more sophisticated scenarios. In those cases, several of those entities could have the same ID, let's say `foo` (a user `foo`, a car `foo`, and a blog post `foo`).
Registered: Sun Nov 03 07:19:11 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Sat Oct 26 11:45:10 UTC 2024 - 12.8K bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/en/docs/advanced/async-tests.md
# Async Tests You have already seen how to test your **FastAPI** applications using the provided `TestClient`. Up to now, you have only seen how to write synchronous tests, without using `async` functions.
Registered: Sun Nov 03 07:19:11 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Sun Oct 27 15:43:29 UTC 2024 - 3.8K bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/en/docs/advanced/additional-responses.md
/// note Notice that you have to return the image using a `FileResponse` directly. /// /// info Unless you specify a different media type explicitly in your `responses` parameter, FastAPI will assume the response has the same media type as the main response class (default `application/json`).
Registered: Sun Nov 03 07:19:11 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Sun Oct 27 16:07:07 UTC 2024 - 8.7K bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/en/docs/advanced/additional-status-codes.md
If you want to return additional status codes apart from the main one, you can do that by returning a `Response` directly, like a `JSONResponse`, and set the additional status code directly. For example, let's say that you want to have a *path operation* that allows to update items, and returns HTTP status codes of 200 "OK" when successful.
Registered: Sun Nov 03 07:19:11 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Sun Oct 27 16:12:23 UTC 2024 - 1.9K bytes - Viewed (0) -
CONTRIBUTING.md
For any non-trivial change, we need to be able to answer these questions: * Why is this change done? What's the use case? * For user facing features, what will the API look like? * What test cases should it have? What could go wrong? * How will it roughly be implemented? We'll happily provide code pointers to save you time.
Registered: Wed Nov 06 11:36:14 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Tue Nov 05 15:15:33 UTC 2024 - 15.6K bytes - Viewed (0) -
impl/maven-core/lifecycle-executor.txt
We have a lifecycle mapping for the packaging of *jar* below. You see that for this packaging we have a *default* lifecycle and a list of phases where each phase is a comma separated list of goals to run and they are in the form groupId:artifactId:version. <configuration> <lifecycles> <lifecycle> <id>default</id> <phases> <process-resources>org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-resources-plugin:resources</process-resources>
Registered: Sun Nov 03 03:35:11 UTC 2024 - Last Modified: Fri Oct 25 12:31:46 UTC 2024 - 9.7K bytes - Viewed (0)