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  1. docs/en/docs/async.md

    Asynchronous code just means that the language 💬 has a way to tell the computer / program 🤖 that at some point in the code, it 🤖 will have to wait for *something else* to finish somewhere else. Let's say that *something else* is called "slow-file" 📝.
    
    So, during that time, the computer can go and do some other work, while "slow-file" 📝 finishes.
    
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  2. docs/en/docs/advanced/events.md

    ### Async Context Manager
    
    If you check, the function is decorated with an `@asynccontextmanager`.
    
    That converts the function into something called an "**async context manager**".
    
    ```Python hl_lines="1  13"
    {!../../../docs_src/events/tutorial003.py!}
    ```
    
    A **context manager** in Python is something that you can use in a `with` statement, for example, `open()` can be used as a context manager:
    
    ```Python
    with open("file.txt") as file:
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  3. docs/en/docs/tutorial/first-steps.md

    !!! info "`@decorator` Info"
        That `@something` syntax in Python is called a "decorator".
    
        You put it on top of a function. Like a pretty decorative hat (I guess that's where the term came from).
    
        A "decorator" takes the function below and does something with it.
    
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  4. .github/workflows/feedback.yml

      workflow_dispatch:
    
    permissions: {}
    
    jobs:
      feedback:
        permissions:
          issues: write
          pull-requests: write
        runs-on: ubuntu-latest
        steps:
          # Feedback loop: ask for something on PR/Issue and close if not provided or return to the queue on update.
          # https://github.com/gradle/issue-management-action/blob/main/src/feedback.ts
          - uses: gradle/issue-management-action@v1
            with:
    Others
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  5. docs/en/docs/advanced/behind-a-proxy.md

        "servers": [
            {
                "url": "/api/v1"
            }
        ],
        "paths": {
                // More stuff here
        }
    }
    ```
    
    In this example, the "Proxy" could be something like **Traefik**. And the server would be something like FastAPI CLI with **Uvicorn**, running your FastAPI application.
    
    ### Providing the `root_path`
    
    To achieve this, you can use the command line option `--root-path` like:
    
    <div class="termy">
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  6. docs/en/docs/deployment/concepts.md

    We also saw that HTTPS is normally provided by a component **external** to your application server, a **TLS Termination Proxy**.
    
    And there has to be something in charge of **renewing the HTTPS certificates**, it could be the same component or it could be something different.
    
    ### Example Tools for HTTPS
    
    Some of the tools you could use as a TLS Termination Proxy are:
    
    * Traefik
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  7. docs/en/docs/alternatives.md

    But at some point, there was no other option than creating something that provided all these features, taking the best ideas from previous tools, and combining them in the best way possible, using language features that weren't even available before (Python 3.6+ type hints).
    
    ## Previous tools
    
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  8. docker/Dockerfile.base

    FROM ubuntu:noble
    
    ENV DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive
    
    # Do not add more stuff to this list that isn't small or critically useful.
    # If you occasionally need something on the container do
    # sudo apt-get update && apt-get whichever
    
    # hadolint ignore=DL3005,DL3008
    RUN apt-get update && \
      apt-get install --no-install-recommends -y \
      ca-certificates \
      curl \
      iptables \
      iproute2 \
      iputils-ping \
      knot-dnsutils \
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  9. docs/en/docs/how-to/async-sql-encode-databases.md

    ### About `{**note.dict(), "id": last_record_id}`
    
    `note` is a Pydantic `Note` object.
    
    `note.dict()` returns a `dict` with its data, something like:
    
    ```Python
    {
        "text": "Some note",
        "completed": False,
    }
    ```
    
    but it doesn't have the `id` field.
    
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  10. android/guava/src/com/google/common/base/Supplier.java

    /**
     * A class that can supply objects of a single type; a pre-Java-8 version of {@link
     * java.util.function.Supplier java.util.function.Supplier}. Semantically, this could be a factory,
     * generator, builder, closure, or something else entirely. No guarantees are implied by this
     * interface.
     *
     * <p>The {@link Suppliers} class provides common suppliers and related utilities.
     *
     * <p>See the Guava User Guide article on <a href=
    Java
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