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docs/en/docs/tutorial/response-model.md
!!! tip If you have strict type checks in your editor, mypy, etc, you can declare the function return type as `Any`. That way you tell the editor that you are intentionally returning anything. But FastAPI will still do the data documentation, validation, filtering, etc. with the `response_model`. ### `response_model` Priority
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docs/en/docs/alternatives.md
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docs/en/docs/python-types.md
```Python hl_lines="2" {!../../../docs_src/python_types/tutorial004.py!} ``` ## Declaring types You just saw the main place to declare type hints. As function parameters. This is also the main place you would use them with **FastAPI**. ### Simple types You can declare all the standard Python types, not only `str`. You can use, for example: * `int` * `float` * `bool` * `bytes`
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docs/en/docs/advanced/behind-a-proxy.md
And it's also used internally when mounting sub-applications. ## Proxy with a stripped path prefix Having a proxy with a stripped path prefix, in this case, means that you could declare a path at `/app` in your code, but then, you add a layer on top (the proxy) that would put your **FastAPI** application under a path like `/api/v1`. In this case, the original path `/app` would actually be served at `/api/v1/app`.
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/bigger-applications.md
```Python hl_lines="1 3" title="app/routers/users.py" {!../../../docs_src/bigger_applications/app/routers/users.py!} ``` ### *Path operations* with `APIRouter` And then you use it to declare your *path operations*. Use it the same way you would use the `FastAPI` class: ```Python hl_lines="6 11 16" title="app/routers/users.py" {!../../../docs_src/bigger_applications/app/routers/users.py!} ```
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docs/en/docs/advanced/security/oauth2-scopes.md
```Python hl_lines="155" {!> ../../../docs_src/security/tutorial005.py!} ``` ## Declare scopes in *path operations* and dependencies Now we declare that the *path operation* for `/users/me/items/` requires the scope `items`. For this, we import and use `Security` from `fastapi`.
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docs/vi/docs/features.md
Bạn viết chuẩn Python với kiểu dữ liệu như sau: ```Python from datetime import date from pydantic import BaseModel # Declare a variable as a str # and get editor support inside the function def main(user_id: str): return user_id # A Pydantic model class User(BaseModel): id: int name: str joined: date ```
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/query-params-str-validations.md
It is used by Pydantic and FastAPI to explicitly declare that a value is required. This will let **FastAPI** know that this parameter is required. ### Required with `None` You can declare that a parameter can accept `None`, but that it's still required. This would force clients to send a value, even if the value is `None`. To do that, you can declare that `None` is a valid type but still use `...` as the default:
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docs/pt/docs/async.md
Se você estiver utilizando bibliotecas de terceiros que dizem para você chamar as funções com `await`, como: ```Python results = await some_library() ``` Então, declare sua *função de operação de rota* com `async def` como: ```Python hl_lines="2" @app.get('/') async def read_results(): results = await some_library() return results ``` !!! note
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/request-files.md
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