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.github/ISSUE_TEMPLATE/privileged.yml
label: Privileged issue description: Confirm that you are allowed to create an issue here. options: - label: I'm @tiangolo or he asked me directly to create an issue here. required: true - type: textarea id: content attributes: label: Issue Content
Others - Registered: Sun Apr 28 07:19:10 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Tue Jan 31 14:02:52 GMT 2023 - 889 bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/en/docs/how-to/async-sql-encode-databases.md
Notice that all this code is pure SQLAlchemy Core. `databases` is not doing anything here yet. ## Import and set up `databases` * Import `databases`. * Create a `DATABASE_URL`. * Create a `database` object. ```Python hl_lines="3 9 12" {!../../../docs_src/async_sql_databases/tutorial001.py!} ``` !!! tip If you were connecting to a different database (e.g. PostgreSQL), you would need to change the `DATABASE_URL`.
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docs/en/docs/fastapi-people.md
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docs/en/docs/reference/index.md
# Reference - Code API Here's the reference or code API, the classes, functions, parameters, attributes, and all the FastAPI parts you can use in your applications. If you want to **learn FastAPI** you are much better off reading the
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docs/en/mkdocs.maybe-insiders.yml
# Define this here and not in the main mkdocs.yml file because that one is auto # updated and written, and the script would remove the env var INHERIT: !ENV [INSIDERS_FILE, '../en/mkdocs.no-insiders.yml'] markdown_extensions: pymdownx.highlight:
Others - Registered: Sun Apr 28 07:19:10 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Fri Jun 30 16:23:02 GMT 2023 - 285 bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs_src/custom_response/tutorial004.py
from fastapi import FastAPI from fastapi.responses import HTMLResponse app = FastAPI() def generate_html_response(): html_content = """ <html> <head> <title>Some HTML in here</title> </head> <body> <h1>Look ma! HTML!</h1> </body> </html> """ return HTMLResponse(content=html_content, status_code=200)
Python - Registered: Sun Apr 28 07:19:10 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Thu Mar 26 19:09:53 GMT 2020 - 491 bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs_src/dependencies/tutorial008c_an.py
f"The portal gun is too dangerous to be owned by {username}" ) if item_id != "plumbus": raise HTTPException( status_code=404, detail="Item not found, there's only a plumbus here" )
Python - Registered: Sun Apr 28 07:19:10 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Sat Feb 24 23:06:37 GMT 2024 - 710 bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/en/docs/deployment/https.md
* Caddy (that can also handle certificate renewals) * Nginx * HAProxy ## Let's Encrypt Before Let's Encrypt, these **HTTPS certificates** were sold by trusted third parties. The process to acquire one of these certificates used to be cumbersome, require quite some paperwork and the certificates were quite expensive. But then **<a href="https://letsencrypt.org/" class="external-link" target="_blank">Let's Encrypt</a>** was created.
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tests/test_tutorial/test_dependencies/test_tutorial008d.py
def test_get_no_item(client: TestClient): response = client.get("/items/foo") assert response.status_code == 404, response.text assert response.json() == {"detail": "Item not found, there's only a plumbus here"} def test_get(client: TestClient): response = client.get("/items/plumbus") assert response.status_code == 200, response.text assert response.json() == "plumbus"
Python - Registered: Sun Apr 28 07:19:10 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Sat Feb 24 23:06:37 GMT 2024 - 1.2K bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/en/docs/deployment/concepts.md
have to make sure that it's a single process running those previous steps *even* if afterwards, you start **multiple processes** (multiple workers) for the application itself. If those steps were run by **multiple processes**, they would **duplicate** the work by running it on **parallel**, and if the steps were something delicate like a database migration, they could cause conflicts with each other. Of course, there are some cases where there's no problem in running the previous steps multiple...
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