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  1. docs/en/docs/deployment/docker.md

    Downloading and installing the package dependencies **could take minutes**, but using the **cache** would **take seconds** at most.
    
    And as you would be building the container image again and again during development to check that your code changes are working, there's a lot of accumulated time this would save.
    
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  2. docs/en/docs/advanced/settings.md

    And then the `admin_email` setting would be set to `"******@****.***"`.
    
    The `app_name` would be `"ChimichangApp"`.
    
    And the `items_per_user` would keep its default value of `50`.
    
    ## Settings in another module
    
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  3. docs/en/docs/deployment/concepts.md

    This Manager Process would probably be the one listening on the **port** in the IP. And it would transmit all the communication to the worker processes.
    
    Those worker processes would be the ones running your application, they would perform the main computations to receive a **request** and return a **response**, and they would load anything you put in variables in RAM.
    
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  4. docs/en/docs/tutorial/security/oauth2-jwt.md

    And then, you could give that JWT token to a user (or bot), and they could use it to perform those actions (drive the car, or edit the blog post) without even needing to have an account, just with the JWT token your API generated for that.
    
    Using these ideas, JWT can be used for way more sophisticated scenarios.
    
    In those cases, several of those entities could have the same ID, let's say `foo` (a user `foo`, a car `foo`, and a blog post `foo`).
    
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  5. maven-compat/src/main/java/org/apache/maven/artifact/repository/metadata/DefaultRepositoryMetadataManager.java

                            wagonManager.getArtifactMetadata(metadata, repository, file, policy.getChecksumPolicy());
                        } catch (ResourceDoesNotExistException e) {
                            getLogger().debug(metadata + " could not be found on repository: " + repository.getId());
    
                            // delete the local copy so the old details aren't used.
                            if (file.exists()) {
    Java
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  6. android/guava/src/com/google/common/base/Converter.java

         * implement Function<A, B>, as discussed in a class-level comment), it would make some sense to
         * perform runtime null checks on the input and output. (That would also make NullPointerTester
         * happy!) However, since we didn't do that for many years, we're not about to start now.
         * (Runtime checks could be particularly bad for users of LegacyConverter.)
         *
    Java
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  7. android/guava/src/com/google/common/util/concurrent/AggregateFuture.java

        /*
         * requireNonNull is safe because this is called from the constructor after `futures` is set but
         * before releaseResources could be called (because we have not yet set up any of the listeners
         * that could call it, nor exposed this Future for users to call cancel() on).
         */
        requireNonNull(futures);
    
        // Corner case: List is empty.
        if (futures.isEmpty()) {
          handleAllCompleted();
    Java
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  8. docs/en/docs/advanced/generate-clients.md

    But for the generated client we could **modify** the OpenAPI operation IDs right before generating the clients, just to make those method names nicer and **cleaner**.
    
    We could download the OpenAPI JSON to a file `openapi.json` and then we could **remove that prefixed tag** with a script like this:
    
    === "Python"
    
        ```Python
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  9. docs/en/docs/deployment/https.md

    Here's an example of how an HTTPS API could look like, step by step, paying attention mainly to the ideas important for developers.
    
    ### Domain Name
    
    It would probably all start by you **acquiring** some **domain name**. Then, you would configure it in a DNS server (possibly your same cloud provider).
    
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  10. docs/en/docs/how-to/sql-databases-peewee.md

    !!! tip
        As FastAPI is an async framework, one request could start being processed, and before finishing, another request could be received and start processing as well, and it all could be processed in the same thread.
    
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