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  1. docs/en/docs/alternatives.md

    As the parameters are described with TypeScript types (similar to Python type hints), editor support is quite good.
    
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  2. docs/en/docs/deployment/concepts.md

    case, it could be better to have only 2 servers and use a higher percentage of their resources (CPU, memory, disk, network bandwidth, etc).
    
    On the other hand, if you have 2 servers and you are using **100% of their CPU and RAM**, at some point one process will ask for more memory, and the server will have to use the disk as "memory" (which can be thousands of times slower), or even **crash**. Or one process might need to do some computation and would have to wait until the CPU is free again....
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  3. docs/en/docs/advanced/generate-clients.md

    You would also have **inline errors** for everything.
    
    And whenever you update the backend code, and **regenerate** the frontend, it would have any new *path operations* available as methods, the old ones removed, and any other change would be reflected on the generated code. 🤓
    
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  4. docs/en/docs/tutorial/response-model.md

    But in most of the cases where we need to do something like this, we want the model just to **filter/remove** some of the data as in this example.
    
    And in those cases, we can use classes and inheritance to take advantage of function **type annotations** to get better support in the editor and tools, and still get the FastAPI **data filtering**.
    
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  5. fastapi/security/oauth2.py

        similar, and get the two parts `items` and `read`. Many applications do that to
        group and organize permissions, you could do it as well in your application, just
        know that that it is application specific, it's not part of the specification.
    
    
        grant_type: the OAuth2 spec says it is required and MUST be the fixed string "password".
    Python
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  6. docs/en/docs/contributing.md

    If you create a Python file that imports and uses FastAPI, and run it with the Python from your local environment, it will use your cloned local FastAPI source code.
    
    And if you update that local FastAPI source code when you run that Python file again, it will use the fresh version of FastAPI you just edited.
    
    That way, you don't have to "install" your local version to be able to test every change.
    
    !!! note "Technical Details"
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  7. fastapi/security/http.py

        ) -> Optional[HTTPAuthorizationCredentials]:
            authorization = request.headers.get("Authorization")
            scheme, credentials = get_authorization_scheme_param(authorization)
            if not (authorization and scheme and credentials):
                if self.auto_error:
                    raise HTTPException(
                        status_code=HTTP_403_FORBIDDEN, detail="Not authenticated"
                    )
                else:
    Python
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  8. docs/en/docs/advanced/behind-a-proxy.md

    In a case like that (without a stripped path prefix), the proxy would listen on something like `https://myawesomeapp.com`, and then if the browser goes to `https://myawesomeapp.com/api/v1/app` and your server (e.g. Uvicorn) listens on `http://127.0.0.1:8000` the proxy (without a stripped path prefix) would access Uvicorn at the same path: `http://127.0.0.1:8000/api/v1/app`.
    
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  9. docs/en/docs/tutorial/first-steps.md

    The term "schema" might also refer to the shape of some data, like a JSON content.
    
    In that case, it would mean the JSON attributes, and data types they have, etc.
    
    #### OpenAPI and JSON Schema
    
    OpenAPI defines an API schema for your API. And that schema includes definitions (or "schemas") of the data sent and received by your API using **JSON Schema**, the standard for JSON data schemas.
    
    #### Check the `openapi.json`
    
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  10. fastapi/params.py

            max_length: Optional[int] = None,
            pattern: Optional[str] = None,
            regex: Annotated[
                Optional[str],
                deprecated(
                    "Deprecated in FastAPI 0.100.0 and Pydantic v2, use `pattern` instead."
                ),
            ] = None,
            discriminator: Union[str, None] = None,
            strict: Union[bool, None] = _Unset,
            multiple_of: Union[float, None] = _Unset,
    Python
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