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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. """ def __init__( self, *, grant_type: Annotated[ Union[str, None], Form(pattern="password"), Doc(
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docs/en/docs/advanced/behind-a-proxy.md
And the `--root-path` command line option provides that `root_path`. ### Checking the current `root_path` You can get the current `root_path` used by your application for each request, it is part of the `scope` dictionary (that's part of the ASGI spec). Here we are including it in the message just for demonstration purposes. ```Python hl_lines="8" {!../../../docs_src/behind_a_proxy/tutorial001.py!} ```
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fastapi/security/http.py
""" The HTTP authorization credentials in the result of using `HTTPBearer` or `HTTPDigest` in a dependency. The HTTP authorization header value is split by the first space. The first part is the `scheme`, the second part is the `credentials`. For example, in an HTTP Bearer token scheme, the client will send a header like: ``` Authorization: Bearer deadbeef12346 ``` In this case:
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docs/de/docs/tutorial/first-steps.md
### Alternative API-Dokumentation Gehen Sie nun auf <a href="http://127.0.0.1:8000/redoc" class="external-link" target="_blank">http://127.0.0.1:8000/redoc</a>. Dort sehen Sie die alternative, automatische Dokumentation (bereitgestellt durch <a href="https://github.com/Rebilly/ReDoc" class="external-link" target="_blank">ReDoc</a>):
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/first-steps.md
This will be the main point of interaction to create all your API. ### Step 3: create a *path operation* #### Path "Path" here refers to the last part of the URL starting from the first `/`. So, in a URL like: ``` https://example.com/items/foo ``` ...the path would be: ``` /items/foo ``` !!! info
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docs/en/docs/contributing.md
* Do not change anything enclosed in "``" (inline code). * In lines starting with `===` or `!!!`, translate only the ` "... Text ..."` part. Leave the rest unchanged. * You can translate info boxes like `!!! warning` with for example `!!! warning "Achtung"`. But do not change the word immediately after the `!!!`, it determines the color of the info box.
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docs/en/docs/deployment/https.md
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/bigger-applications.md
You want to have the *path operations* related to your users separated from the rest of the code, to keep it organized. But it's still part of the same **FastAPI** application/web API (it's part of the same "Python Package"). You can create the *path operations* for that module using `APIRouter`. ### Import `APIRouter`
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docs/en/docs/deployment/concepts.md
* Kubernetes with an Ingress Controller like Nginx * With an external component like cert-manager for certificate renewals * Handled internally by a cloud provider as part of their services (read below 👇)
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docs/fr/docs/async.md
* **Coroutines** ## Code asynchrone Faire du code asynchrone signifie que le langage 💬 est capable de dire à l'ordinateur / au programme 🤖 qu'à un moment du code, il 🤖 devra attendre que *quelque chose d'autre* se termine autre part. Disons que ce *quelque chose d'autre* est appelé "fichier-lent" 📝. Donc, pendant ce temps, l'ordinateur pourra effectuer d'autres tâches, pendant que "fichier-lent" 📝 se termine.
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