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  1. docs/en/docs/async.md

    This is "synchronous" work, you are "synchronized" with the cashier/cook 👨‍🍳. You have to wait 🕙 and be there at the exact moment that the cashier/cook 👨‍🍳 finishes the burgers and gives them to you, or otherwise, someone else might take them.
    
    <img src="/img/async/parallel-burgers/parallel-burgers-04.png" class="illustration">
    
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  2. docs/ru/docs/async.md

    Но внутреннее устройство **конкурентности** и **параллелизма** довольно разное.
    
    Чтобы это понять, представьте такую картину:
    
    ### Конкурентные бургеры
    
    <!-- The gender neutral cook emoji "🧑‍🍳" does not render well in browsers. In the meantime, I'm using a mix of male "👨‍🍳" and female "👩‍🍳" cooks. -->
    
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  3. docs/en/docs/advanced/generate-clients.md

    Because it is installed in the local project, you probably wouldn't be able to call that command directly, but you would put it on your `package.json` file.
    
    It could look like this:
    
    ```JSON  hl_lines="7"
    {
      "name": "frontend-app",
      "version": "1.0.0",
      "description": "",
      "main": "index.js",
      "scripts": {
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  4. docs/en/docs/tutorial/testing.md

    !!! tip
        If you want to call `async` functions in your tests apart from sending requests to your FastAPI application (e.g. asynchronous database functions), have a look at the [Async Tests](../advanced/async-tests.md){.internal-link target=_blank} in the advanced tutorial.
    
    ## Separating tests
    
    In a real application, you probably would have your tests in a different file.
    
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  5. docs/en/docs/advanced/behind-a-proxy.md

    In the docs UI at <a href="http://127.0.0.1:9999/api/v1/docs" class="external-link" target="_blank">http://127.0.0.1:9999/api/v1/docs</a> it would look like:
    
    <img src="/img/tutorial/behind-a-proxy/image03.png">
    
    !!! tip
        The docs UI will interact with the server that you select.
    
    ### Disable automatic server from `root_path`
    
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  6. docs/en/docs/tutorial/first-steps.md

    # First Steps
    
    The simplest FastAPI file could look like this:
    
    ```Python
    {!../../../docs_src/first_steps/tutorial001.py!}
    ```
    
    Copy that to a file `main.py`.
    
    Run the live server:
    
    <div class="termy">
    
    ```console
    $ <font color="#4E9A06">fastapi</font> dev <u style="text-decoration-style:single">main.py</u>
    <font color="#3465A4">INFO    </font> Using path <font color="#3465A4">main.py</font>
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  7. docs/en/docs/alternatives.md

    The way you use it is very simple. For example, to do a `GET` request, you would write:
    
    ```Python
    response = requests.get("http://example.com/some/url")
    ```
    
    The FastAPI counterpart API *path operation* could look like:
    
    ```Python hl_lines="1"
    @app.get("/some/url")
    def read_url():
        return {"message": "Hello World"}
    ```
    
    See the similarities in `requests.get(...)` and `@app.get(...)`.
    
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  8. docs/en/docs/tutorial/bigger-applications.md

    The section:
    
    ```Python
    from .routers import items, users
    ```
    
    means:
    
    * Starting in the same package that this module (the file `app/main.py`) lives in (the directory `app/`)...
    * look for the subpackage `routers` (the directory at `app/routers/`)...
    * and from it, import the submodule `items` (the file at `app/routers/items.py`) and `users` (the file at `app/routers/users.py`)...
    
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  9. docs/en/docs/release-notes.md

    * 🔧 Add `CITATION.cff` file for academic citations. PR [#10496](https://github.com/tiangolo/fastapi/pull/10496) by [@tiangolo](https://github.com/tiangolo).
    * 🐛 Fix overriding MKDocs theme lang in hook. PR [#10490](https://github.com/tiangolo/fastapi/pull/10490) by [@tiangolo](https://github.com/tiangolo).
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  10. docs/en/docs/advanced/openapi-callbacks.md

    This code won't be executed in your app, we only need it to *document* how that *external API* should look like.
    
    But, you already know how to easily create automatic documentation for an API with **FastAPI**.
    
    So we are going to use that same knowledge to document how the *external API* should look like... by creating the *path operation(s)* that the external API should implement (the ones your API will call).
    
    !!! tip
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