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  1. docs/en/docs/advanced/events.md

    This can be very useful for setting up **resources** that you need to use for the whole app, and that are **shared** among requests, and/or that you need to **clean up** afterwards. For example, a database connection pool, or loading a shared machine learning model.
    
    ## Use Case { #use-case }
    
    Let's start with an example **use case** and then see how to solve it with this.
    
    Created: Sun Dec 28 07:19:09 GMT 2025
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  2. docs/en/docs/tutorial/security/first-steps.md

    OAuth2 was designed so that the backend or API could be independent of the server that authenticates the user.
    
    But in this case, the same **FastAPI** application will handle the API and the authentication.
    
    So, let's review it from that simplified point of view:
    
    * The user types the `username` and `password` in the frontend, and hits `Enter`.
    Created: Sun Dec 28 07:19:09 GMT 2025
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  3. docs/en/docs/tutorial/query-params-str-validations.md

    ### Required, can be `None` { #required-can-be-none }
    
    You can declare that a parameter can accept `None`, but that it's still required. This would force clients to send a value, even if the value is `None`.
    
    To do that, you can declare that `None` is a valid type but simply do not declare a default value:
    
    {* ../../docs_src/query_params_str_validations/tutorial006c_an_py310.py hl[9] *}
    Created: Sun Dec 28 07:19:09 GMT 2025
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  4. docs/en/docs/advanced/generate-clients.md

    OpenAPI requires that each operation ID is unique across all the *path operations*, so FastAPI uses the **function name**, the **path**, and the **HTTP method/operation** to generate that operation ID, because that way it can make sure that the operation IDs are unique.
    
    But I'll show you how to improve that next. 🤓
    
    Created: Sun Dec 28 07:19:09 GMT 2025
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  5. docs/en/docs/tutorial/bigger-applications.md

    That way, the original `APIRouter` will stay unmodified, so we can still share that same `app/internal/admin.py` file with other projects in the organization.
    
    The result is that in our app, each of the *path operations* from the `admin` module will have:
    
    * The prefix `/admin`.
    * The tag `admin`.
    * The dependency `get_token_header`.
    * The response `418`. 🍵
    
    Created: Sun Dec 28 07:19:09 GMT 2025
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  6. docs/en/docs/deployment/versions.md

    That's why the current versions are still `0.x.x`, this reflects that each version could potentially have breaking changes. This follows the <a href="https://semver.org/" class="external-link" target="_blank">Semantic Versioning</a> conventions.
    
    You can create production applications with **FastAPI** right now (and you have probably been doing it for some time), you just have to make sure that you use a version that works correctly with the rest of your code.
    
    Created: Sun Dec 28 07:19:09 GMT 2025
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  7. docs/en/docs/tutorial/response-model.md

    We want FastAPI to keep **filtering** the data using the response model. So that even though the function returns more data, the response will only include the fields declared in the response model.
    
    Created: Sun Dec 28 07:19:09 GMT 2025
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  8. SECURITY.md

    available to TensorFlow is powerful enough that you should assume that the
    TensorFlow process effectively executes arbitrary code.
    
    The risk of loading untrusted checkpoints depends on the code or graph that you
    are working with. When loading untrusted checkpoints, the values of the traced
    variables from your model are also going to be untrusted. That means that if
    Created: Tue Dec 30 12:39:10 GMT 2025
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  9. docs/en/docs/deployment/https.md

    <img src="/img/deployment/https/https03.drawio.svg">
    
    The client already **trusts** the entity that generated that TLS certificate (in this case Let's Encrypt, but we'll see about that later), so it can **verify** that the certificate is valid.
    
    Created: Sun Dec 28 07:19:09 GMT 2025
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  10. docs/en/docs/tutorial/security/simple-oauth2.md

    We are going to use **FastAPI** security utilities to get the `username` and `password`.
    
    OAuth2 specifies that when using the "password flow" (that we are using) the client/user must send a `username` and `password` fields as form data.
    
    And the spec says that the fields have to be named like that. So `user-name` or `email` wouldn't work.
    
    But don't worry, you can show it as you wish to your final users in the frontend.
    
    Created: Sun Dec 28 07:19:09 GMT 2025
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