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  1. docs/en/docs/tutorial/security/get-current-user.md

        ```
    
    But that is still not that useful.
    
    Let's make it give us the current user.
    
    ## Create a user model
    
    First, let's create a Pydantic user model.
    
    The same way we use Pydantic to declare bodies, we can use it anywhere else:
    
    === "Python 3.10+"
    
        ```Python hl_lines="5  12-16"
        {!> ../../../docs_src/security/tutorial002_an_py310.py!}
        ```
    
    === "Python 3.9+"
    
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  2. docs/en/docs/advanced/dataclasses.md

    ```{ .python .annotate hl_lines="1  5  8-11  14-17  23-25  28" }
    {!../../../docs_src/dataclasses/tutorial003.py!}
    ```
    
    1. We still import `field` from standard `dataclasses`.
    
    2. `pydantic.dataclasses` is a drop-in replacement for `dataclasses`.
    
    3. The `Author` dataclass includes a list of `Item` dataclasses.
    
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  3. docs/en/docs/how-to/nosql-databases-couchbase.md

    ```
    
    ## Create Pydantic models
    
    As **Couchbase** "documents" are actually just "JSON objects", we can model them with Pydantic.
    
    ### `User` model
    
    First, let's create a `User` model:
    
    ```Python hl_lines="24-28"
    {!../../../docs_src/nosql_databases/tutorial001.py!}
    ```
    
    We will use this model in our *path operation function*, so, we don't include in it the `hashed_password`.
    
    ### `UserInDB` model
    
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  4. docs/en/docs/tutorial/security/first-steps.md

    We can use **OAuth2** to build that with **FastAPI**.
    
    But let's save you the time of reading the full long specification just to find those little pieces of information you need.
    
    Let's use the tools provided by **FastAPI** to handle security.
    
    ## How it looks
    
    Let's first just use the code and see how it works, and then we'll come back to understand what's happening.
    
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  5. docs/en/docs/how-to/custom-request-and-route.md

    We can also use this same approach to access the request body in an exception handler.
    
    All we need to do is handle the request inside a `try`/`except` block:
    
    ```Python hl_lines="13  15"
    {!../../../docs_src/custom_request_and_route/tutorial002.py!}
    ```
    
    If an exception occurs, the`Request` instance will still be in scope, so we can read and make use of the request body when handling the error:
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  6. docs/en/docs/how-to/async-sql-encode-databases.md

        "completed": False,
    }
    ```
    
    but it doesn't have the `id` field.
    
    So we create a new `dict`, that contains the key-value pairs from `note.dict()` with:
    
    ```Python
    {**note.dict()}
    ```
    
    `**note.dict()` "unpacks" the key value pairs directly, so, `{**note.dict()}` would be, more or less, a copy of `note.dict()`.
    
    And then, we extend that copy `dict`, adding another key-value pair: `"id": last_record_id`:
    
    ```Python
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  7. docs_src/dependencies/tutorial008c_an.py

    from typing_extensions import Annotated
    
    app = FastAPI()
    
    
    class InternalError(Exception):
        pass
    
    
    def get_username():
        try:
            yield "Rick"
        except InternalError:
            print("Oops, we didn't raise again, Britney 😱")
    
    
    @app.get("/items/{item_id}")
    def get_item(item_id: str, username: Annotated[str, Depends(get_username)]):
        if item_id == "portal-gun":
            raise InternalError(
    Python
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  8. docs/en/docs/tutorial/metadata.md

    ### Order of tags
    
    The order of each tag metadata dictionary also defines the order shown in the docs UI.
    
    For example, even though `users` would go after `items` in alphabetical order, it is shown before them, because we added their metadata as the first dictionary in the list.
    
    ## OpenAPI URL
    
    By default, the OpenAPI schema is served at `/openapi.json`.
    
    But you can configure it with the parameter `openapi_url`.
    
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  9. docs/en/docs/tutorial/extra-models.md

    So, if we create a Pydantic object `user_in` like:
    
    ```Python
    user_in = UserIn(username="john", password="secret", email="******@****.***")
    ```
    
    and then we call:
    
    ```Python
    user_dict = user_in.dict()
    ```
    
    we now have a `dict` with the data in the variable `user_dict` (it's a `dict` instead of a Pydantic model object).
    
    And if we call:
    
    ```Python
    print(user_dict)
    ```
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  10. docs/en/docs/tutorial/body-nested-models.md

        ```Python hl_lines="14"
        {!> ../../../docs_src/body_nested_models/tutorial002.py!}
        ```
    
    ## Set types
    
    But then we think about it, and realize that tags shouldn't repeat, they would probably be unique strings.
    
    And Python has a special data type for sets of unique items, the `set`.
    
    Then we can declare `tags` as a set of strings:
    
    === "Python 3.10+"
    
        ```Python hl_lines="12"
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