Search Options

Display Count
Sort
Preferred Language
Advanced Search

Results 1 - 10 of 172 for Tell (0.04 seconds)

  1. .github/ISSUE_TEMPLATE/20_contributor_feature_request.yml

            Provide a brief summary of the issue in the title above
      - type: textarea
        id: expected-behavior
        attributes:
          label: Expected Behavior
          description: Tell us how it should work
        validations:
          required: true
      - type: textarea
        id: current-behavior
        attributes:
          label: Current Behavior (optional)
    Created: Wed Apr 01 11:36:16 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Thu Nov 27 15:48:22 GMT 2025
    - 1.5K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  2. okhttp/src/commonJvmAndroid/kotlin/okhttp3/internal/connection/ConnectPlan.kt

          isTlsFallback = isTlsFallback,
        )
    
      override fun connectTcp(): ConnectResult {
        check(rawSocket == null) { "TCP already connected" }
    
        var success = false
    
        // Tell the call about the connecting call so async cancels work.
        call.plansToCancel += this
        try {
          call.eventListener.connectStart(call, route.socketAddress, route.proxy)
    Created: Fri Apr 03 11:42:14 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Tue Jan 27 09:00:39 GMT 2026
    - 19.3K bytes
    - Click Count (2)
  3. docs/en/docs/advanced/vibe.md

    The body should be annotated with `Any`, because the request and the response would be... well... **anything**. 🤷
    
    The idea is that you would receive the payload and send it **directly** to an LLM provider, using a `prompt` to tell the LLM what to do, and return the response **as is**. No questions asked.
    
    Created: Sun Apr 05 07:19:11 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Wed Apr 01 16:16:24 GMT 2026
    - 2K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  4. docs/en/docs/advanced/json-base64-bytes.md

    ## Pydantic `bytes` { #pydantic-bytes }
    
    You can declare a Pydantic model with `bytes` fields, and then use `val_json_bytes` in the model config to tell it to use base64 to *validate* input JSON data, as part of that validation it will decode the base64 string into bytes.
    
    {* ../../docs_src/json_base64_bytes/tutorial001_py310.py ln[1:9,29:35] hl[9] *}
    
    Created: Sun Apr 05 07:19:11 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Thu Mar 05 18:13:19 GMT 2026
    - 2.4K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  5. docs/en/docs/deployment/server-workers.md

    /// info
    
    If you are using containers, for example with Docker or Kubernetes, I'll tell you more about that in the next chapter: [FastAPI in Containers - Docker](docker.md).
    
    In particular, when running on **Kubernetes** you will probably **not** want to use workers and instead run **a single Uvicorn process per container**, but I'll tell you about it later in that chapter.
    
    ///
    
    ## Multiple Workers { #multiple-workers }
    
    Created: Sun Apr 05 07:19:11 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Thu Mar 05 18:13:19 GMT 2026
    - 8.2K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  6. AI_POLICY.md

    ## What we expect from contributors
    
    Created: Wed Apr 01 11:36:16 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Fri Mar 27 18:43:39 GMT 2026
    - 3.1K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  7. docs/en/docs/advanced/middleware.md

    In general, ASGI middlewares are classes that expect to receive an ASGI app as the first argument.
    
    So, in the documentation for third-party ASGI middlewares they will probably tell you to do something like:
    
    ```Python
    from unicorn import UnicornMiddleware
    
    app = SomeASGIApp()
    
    new_app = UnicornMiddleware(app, some_config="rainbow")
    ```
    
    Created: Sun Apr 05 07:19:11 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Thu Mar 05 18:13:19 GMT 2026
    - 4.1K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  8. docs/en/docs/deployment/https.md

    ### DNS { #dns }
    
    Now let's focus on all the actual HTTPS parts.
    
    First, the browser would check with the **DNS servers** what is the **IP for the domain**, in this case, `someapp.example.com`.
    
    The DNS servers would tell the browser to use some specific **IP address**. That would be the public IP address used by your server, that you configured in the DNS servers.
    
    <img src="/img/deployment/https/https01.drawio.svg">
    
    Created: Sun Apr 05 07:19:11 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Thu Mar 05 18:13:19 GMT 2026
    - 14K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  9. src/test/java/org/codelibs/fess/llm/AbstractLlmClientTest.java

            history.add(LlmMessage.user("How to install Fess?"));
            history.add(LlmMessage.assistant("You can install Fess using Docker."));
            final LlmChatRequest request = client.testBuildIntentRequest("Tell me more about Docker", history);
            final List<LlmMessage> messages = request.getMessages();
            // system + 2 history + user = 4 messages
            assertEquals(4, messages.size());
    Created: Tue Mar 31 13:07:34 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Thu Mar 19 07:04:54 GMT 2026
    - 53K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
  10. docs/en/docs/advanced/openapi-webhooks.md

    # OpenAPI Webhooks { #openapi-webhooks }
    
    There are cases where you want to tell your API **users** that your app could call *their* app (sending a request) with some data, normally to **notify** of some type of **event**.
    
    This means that instead of the normal process of your users sending requests to your API, it's **your API** (or your app) that could **send requests to their system** (to their API, their app).
    
    This is normally called a **webhook**.
    
    Created: Sun Apr 05 07:19:11 GMT 2026
    - Last Modified: Thu Mar 05 18:13:19 GMT 2026
    - 2.9K bytes
    - Click Count (0)
Back to Top