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  1. docs/en/docs/alternatives.md

    ## Intro
    
    **FastAPI** wouldn't exist if not for the previous work of others.
    
    There have been many tools created before that have helped inspire its creation.
    
    I have been avoiding the creation of a new framework for several years. First I tried to solve all the features covered by **FastAPI** using many different frameworks, plug-ins, and tools.
    
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  2. docs/en/docs/advanced/generate-clients.md

    One particular advantage that is not necessarily obvious is that you can **generate clients** (sometimes called <abbr title="Software Development Kits">**SDKs**</abbr> ) for your API, for many different **programming languages**.
    
    ## OpenAPI Client Generators
    
    There are many tools to generate clients from **OpenAPI**.
    
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  3. fastapi/security/oauth2.py

        Note that for OAuth2 the scope `items:read` is a single scope in an opaque string.
        You could have custom internal logic to separate it by colon caracters (`:`) or
        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__(
    Python
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  4. docs/en/docs/advanced/behind-a-proxy.md

    ## About proxies with a stripped path prefix
    
    Keep in mind that a proxy with stripped path prefix is only one of the ways to configure it.
    
    Probably in many cases the default will be that the proxy doesn't have a stripped path prefix.
    
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  5. docs/en/docs/tutorial/first-steps.md

    {!../../../docs_src/first_steps/tutorial001.py!}
    ```
    
    You can return a `dict`, `list`, singular values as `str`, `int`, etc.
    
    You can also return Pydantic models (you'll see more about that later).
    
    There are many other objects and models that will be automatically converted to JSON (including ORMs, etc). Try using your favorite ones, it's highly probable that they are already supported.
    
    ## Recap
    
    * Import `FastAPI`.
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  6. docs/en/docs/contributing.md

    !!! tip
        You don't need to see the code in `./scripts/docs.py`, you just use it in the command line.
    
    All the documentation is in Markdown format in the directory `./docs/en/`.
    
    Many of the tutorials have blocks of code.
    
    In most of the cases, these blocks of code are actual complete applications that can be run as is.
    
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  7. docs/en/docs/tutorial/response-model.md

    * `tags: List[str] = []` has a default of an empty list: `[]`.
    
    but you might want to omit them from the result if they were not actually stored.
    
    For example, if you have models with many optional attributes in a NoSQL database, but you don't want to send very long JSON responses full of default values.
    
    ### Use the `response_model_exclude_unset` parameter
    
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  8. docs/pl/docs/index.md

    ---
    
    "_Honestly, what you've built looks super solid and polished. In many ways, it's what I wanted **Hug** to be - it's really inspiring to see someone build that._"
    
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  9. docs/it/docs/index.md

    ---
    
    "_Honestly, what you've built looks super solid and polished. In many ways, it's what I wanted **Hug** to be - it's really inspiring to see someone build that._"
    
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  10. docs/en/docs/tutorial/security/oauth2-jwt.md

    So, the thief won't be able to try to use that password in another system (as many users use the same password everywhere, this would be dangerous).
    
    ## Install `passlib`
    
    PassLib is a great Python package to handle password hashes.
    
    It supports many secure hashing algorithms and utilities to work with them.
    
    The recommended algorithm is "Bcrypt".
    
    So, install PassLib with Bcrypt:
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