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  1. docs/en/docs/benchmarks.md

        * If you didn't use FastAPI and used Starlette directly (or another tool, like Sanic, Flask, Responder, etc) you would have to implement all the data validation and serialization yourself. So, your final application would still have the same overhead as if it was...
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  2. docs_src/dependencies/tutorial008c_an.py

    from typing_extensions import Annotated
    
    app = FastAPI()
    
    
    class InternalError(Exception):
        pass
    
    
    def get_username():
        try:
            yield "Rick"
        except InternalError:
            print("Oops, we didn't raise again, Britney 😱")
    
    
    @app.get("/items/{item_id}")
    def get_item(item_id: str, username: Annotated[str, Depends(get_username)]):
        if item_id == "portal-gun":
            raise InternalError(
    Python
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  3. docs/en/docs/alternatives.md

    Body schema definitions didn't use the same Python type hints like Pydantic, it was a bit more similar to Marshmallow, so, editor support wouldn't be as good, but still, APIStar was the best available option.
    
    It had the best performance benchmarks at the time (only surpassed by Starlette).
    
    At first, it didn't have an automatic API documentation web UI, but I knew I could add Swagger UI to it.
    
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  4. docs/en/docs/tutorial/path-params.md

    !!! check
        So, with the same Python type declaration, **FastAPI** gives you data validation.
    
        Notice that the error also clearly states exactly the point where the validation didn't pass.
    
        This is incredibly helpful while developing and debugging code that interacts with your API.
    
    ## Documentation
    
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  5. docs_src/dependencies/tutorial008c.py

    app = FastAPI()
    
    
    class InternalError(Exception):
        pass
    
    
    def get_username():
        try:
            yield "Rick"
        except InternalError:
            print("Oops, we didn't raise again, Britney 😱")
    
    
    @app.get("/items/{item_id}")
    def get_item(item_id: str, username: str = Depends(get_username)):
        if item_id == "portal-gun":
            raise InternalError(
    Python
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  6. docs_src/dependencies/tutorial008c_an_py39.py

    app = FastAPI()
    
    
    class InternalError(Exception):
        pass
    
    
    def get_username():
        try:
            yield "Rick"
        except InternalError:
            print("Oops, we didn't raise again, Britney 😱")
    
    
    @app.get("/items/{item_id}")
    def get_item(item_id: str, username: Annotated[str, Depends(get_username)]):
        if item_id == "portal-gun":
            raise InternalError(
    Python
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    - Last Modified: Sat Feb 24 23:06:37 GMT 2024
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  7. docs/en/docs/tutorial/schema-extra-example.md

    Now, as Swagger UI didn't support multiple JSON Schema examples (as of 2023-08-26), users didn't have a way to show multiple examples in the docs.
    
    To solve that, FastAPI `0.103.0` **added support** for declaring the same old **OpenAPI-specific** `examples` field with the new parameter `openapi_examples`. 🤓
    
    ### Summary
    
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  8. docs/en/docs/advanced/response-change-status-code.md

    But in some cases you need to return a different status code than the default.
    
    ## Use case
    
    For example, imagine that you want to return an HTTP status code of "OK" `200` by default.
    
    But if the data didn't exist, you want to create it, and return an HTTP status code of "CREATED" `201`.
    
    But you still want to be able to filter and convert the data you return with a `response_model`.
    
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  9. docs/em/docs/advanced/settings.md

        🚥 🚫 🚚, ⚫️ `None` 🔢, 📥 👥 🚚 `"World"` 🔢 💲 ⚙️.
    
    ⤴️ 👆 💪 🤙 👈 🐍 📋:
    
    <div class="termy">
    
    ```console
    // Here we don't set the env var yet
    $ python main.py
    
    // As we didn't set the env var, we get the default value
    
    Hello World from Python
    
    // But if we create an environment variable first
    $ export MY_NAME="Wade Wilson"
    
    // And then call the program again
    $ python main.py
    
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  10. docs/fr/docs/async.md

    Cette page vise à fournir des détails sur la syntaxe `async def` pour les *fonctions de chemins* et quelques rappels sur le code asynchrone, la concurrence et le parallélisme.
    
    ## Vous êtes pressés ?
    
    <abbr title="'too long; didn't read' en anglais, ou 'trop long ; j'ai pas lu'"><strong>TL;DR :</strong></abbr>
    
    Si vous utilisez des bibliothèques tierces qui nécessitent d'être appelées avec `await`, telles que :
    
    ```Python
    results = await some_library()
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