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  1. docs/en/docs/advanced/behind-a-proxy.md

    ## Testing locally with Traefik
    
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  2. docs/en/docs/deployment/concepts.md

    * There can be **multiple processes** of the **same program** running at the same time.
    
    If you check out the "task manager" or "system monitor" (or similar tools) in your operating system, you will be able to see many of those processes running.
    
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  3. docs/en/docs/release-notes.md

    * Add note to docs: [Include the same router multiple times with different `prefix`](https://fastapi.tiangolo.com/tutorial/bigger-applications/#include-the-same-router-multiple-times-with-different-prefix). PR [#348](https://github.com/tiangolo/fastapi/pull/348).
    
    * Fix OpenAPI/JSON Schema generation for two functions with the same name (in different modules) with the same composite bodies.
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  4. docs/en/docs/advanced/openapi-webhooks.md

    ```Python hl_lines="9-13  36-53"
    {!../../../docs_src/openapi_webhooks/tutorial001.py!}
    ```
    
    The webhooks that you define will end up in the **OpenAPI** schema and the automatic **docs UI**.
    
    !!! info
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  5. docs/en/docs/advanced/openapi-callbacks.md

    The process that happens when your API app calls the *external API* is named a "callback". Because the software that the external developer wrote sends a request to your API and then your API *calls back*, sending a request to an *external API* (that was probably created by the same developer).
    
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  6. docs/en/docs/features.md

    This also means that in many cases you can pass the same object you get from a request **directly to the database**, as everything is validated automatically.
    
    The same applies the other way around, in many cases you can just pass the object you get from the database **directly to the client**.
    
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  7. docs/en/docs/advanced/websockets.md

    <img src="/img/tutorial/websockets/image04.png">
    
    And all of them will use the same WebSocket connection.
    
    ## Using `Depends` and others
    
    In WebSocket endpoints you can import from `fastapi` and use:
    
    * `Depends`
    * `Security`
    * `Cookie`
    * `Header`
    * `Path`
    * `Query`
    
    They work the same way as for other FastAPI endpoints/*path operations*:
    
    === "Python 3.10+"
    
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  8. README.md

    ## `fastapi-slim`
    
    If you don't want the extra standard optional dependencies, install `fastapi-slim` instead.
    
    When you install with:
    
    ```bash
    pip install fastapi
    ```
    
    ...it includes the same code and dependencies as:
    
    ```bash
    pip install "fastapi-slim[standard]"
    ```
    
    The standard extra dependencies are the ones mentioned above.
    
    ## License
    
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  9. docs/en/docs/advanced/settings.md

    ### Create the `Settings` object
    
    Import `BaseSettings` from Pydantic and create a sub-class, very much like with a Pydantic model.
    
    The same way as with Pydantic models, you declare class attributes with type annotations, and possibly default values.
    
    You can use all the same validation features and tools you use for Pydantic models, like different data types and additional validations with `Field()`.
    
    === "Pydantic v2"
    
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  10. docs/en/docs/tutorial/index.md

    ## Advanced User Guide
    
    There is also an **Advanced User Guide** that you can read later after this **Tutorial - User guide**.
    
    The **Advanced User Guide**, builds on this, uses the same concepts, and teaches you some extra features.
    
    But you should first read the **Tutorial - User Guide** (what you are reading right now).
    
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