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tests/test_tutorial/test_header_params/test_tutorial003_py310.py
@pytest.mark.parametrize( "path,headers,expected_status,expected_response", [ ("/items", None, 200, {"X-Token values": None}), ("/items", {"x-token": "foo"}, 200, {"X-Token values": ["foo"]}), # TODO: fix this, is it a bug? # ("/items", [("x-token", "foo"), ("x-token", "bar")], 200, {"X-Token values": ["foo", "bar"]}), ], ) def test(path, headers, expected_status, expected_response, client: TestClient):
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tests/test_tutorial/test_header_params/test_tutorial003_an_py310.py
@pytest.mark.parametrize( "path,headers,expected_status,expected_response", [ ("/items", None, 200, {"X-Token values": None}), ("/items", {"x-token": "foo"}, 200, {"X-Token values": ["foo"]}), # TODO: fix this, is it a bug? # ("/items", [("x-token", "foo"), ("x-token", "bar")], 200, {"X-Token values": ["foo", "bar"]}), ], ) def test(path, headers, expected_status, expected_response, client: TestClient):
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/dependencies/dependencies-in-path-operation-decorators.md
!!! tip Prefer to use the `Annotated` version if possible. ```Python hl_lines="8 13" {!> ../../../docs_src/dependencies/tutorial006.py!} ``` ### Return values And they can return values or not, the values won't be used. So, you can re-use a normal dependency (that returns a value) you already use somewhere else, and even though the value won't be used, the dependency will be executed:
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/query-params.md
* Data validation * Automatic documentation ## Defaults As query parameters are not a fixed part of a path, they can be optional and can have default values. In the example above they have default values of `skip=0` and `limit=10`. So, going to the URL: ``` http://127.0.0.1:8000/items/ ``` would be the same as going to: ``` http://127.0.0.1:8000/items/?skip=0&limit=10
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tests/test_tutorial/test_query_params_str_validations/test_tutorial013.py
from docs_src.query_params_str_validations.tutorial013 import app client = TestClient(app) def test_multi_query_values(): url = "/items/?q=foo&q=bar" response = client.get(url) assert response.status_code == 200, response.text assert response.json() == {"q": ["foo", "bar"]} def test_query_no_values(): url = "/items/" response = client.get(url) assert response.status_code == 200, response.text
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/encoder.md
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tests/test_tutorial/test_query_params_str_validations/test_tutorial011.py
from docs_src.query_params_str_validations.tutorial011 import app client = TestClient(app) def test_multi_query_values(): url = "/items/?q=foo&q=bar" response = client.get(url) assert response.status_code == 200, response.text assert response.json() == {"q": ["foo", "bar"]} def test_query_no_values(): url = "/items/" response = client.get(url) assert response.status_code == 200, response.text
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tests/test_tutorial/test_query_params_str_validations/test_tutorial011_an.py
from docs_src.query_params_str_validations.tutorial011_an import app client = TestClient(app) def test_multi_query_values(): url = "/items/?q=foo&q=bar" response = client.get(url) assert response.status_code == 200, response.text assert response.json() == {"q": ["foo", "bar"]} def test_query_no_values(): url = "/items/" response = client.get(url) assert response.status_code == 200, response.text
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docs_src/header_params/tutorial003_an_py310.py
from typing import Annotated from fastapi import FastAPI, Header app = FastAPI() @app.get("/items/") async def read_items(x_token: Annotated[list[str] | None, Header()] = None):
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/query-params-str-validations.md
## Query parameter list / multiple values When you define a query parameter explicitly with `Query` you can also declare it to receive a list of values, or said in other way, to receive multiple values. For example, to declare a query parameter `q` that can appear multiple times in the URL, you can write: === "Python 3.10+"
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