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docs/en/docs/tutorial/first-steps.md
<font color="#3465A4">INFO </font> Searching for package file structure from directories with <font color="#3465A4">__init__.py</font> files <font color="#3465A4">INFO </font> Importing from <font color="#75507B">/home/user/code/</font><font color="#AD7FA8">awesomeapp</font> ╭─ <font color="#8AE234"><b>Python module file</b></font> ─╮ │ │ │ 🐍 main.py │ │ │
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docs/en/docs/deployment/manually.md
<font color="#3465A4">INFO </font> Searching for package file structure from directories with <font color="#3465A4">__init__.py</font> files <font color="#3465A4">INFO </font> Importing from <font color="#75507B">/home/user/code/</font><font color="#AD7FA8">awesomeapp</font> ╭─ <font color="#8AE234"><b>Python module file</b></font> ─╮ │ │ │ 🐍 main.py │ │ │
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docs/en/docs/deployment/concepts.md
The word **program** is commonly used to describe many things: * The **code** that you write, the **Python files**. * The **file** that can be **executed** by the operating system, for example: `python`, `python.exe` or `uvicorn`. * A particular program while it is **running** on the operating system, using the CPU, and storing things on memory. This is also called a **process**. ### What is a Process
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docs/en/docs/release-notes.md
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docs/en/docs/fastapi-cli.md
<font color="#3465A4">INFO </font> Searching for package file structure from directories with <font color="#3465A4">__init__.py</font> files <font color="#3465A4">INFO </font> Importing from <font color="#75507B">/home/user/code/</font><font color="#AD7FA8">awesomeapp</font> ╭─ <font color="#8AE234"><b>Python module file</b></font> ─╮ │ │ │ 🐍 main.py │ │ │
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docs/en/docs/advanced/openapi-webhooks.md
This means that instead of the normal process of your users sending requests to your API, it's **your API** (or your app) that could **send requests to their system** (to their API, their app). This is normally called a **webhook**. ## Webhooks steps The process normally is that **you define** in your code what is the message that you will send, the **body of the request**.
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docs/fr/docs/index.md
* **Intuitif** : Excellente compatibilité avec les IDE. <abbr title="également connu sous le nom d'auto-complétion, autocomplétion, IntelliSense">Complétion</abbr> complète. Moins de temps passé à déboguer. * **Facile** : Conçu pour être facile à utiliser et à apprendre. Moins de temps passé à lire la documentation. * **Concis** : Diminue la duplication de code. De nombreuses fonctionnalités liées à la déclaration de chaque paramètre. Moins de bugs.
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docs/en/docs/advanced/settings.md
Then we can test that it is used. ## Reading a `.env` file If you have many settings that possibly change a lot, maybe in different environments, it might be useful to put them on a file and then read them from it as if they were environment variables. This practice is common enough that it has a name, these environment variables are commonly placed in a file `.env`, and the file is called a "dotenv". !!! tip
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docs/en/docs/deployment/docker.md
Here's where we will generate the file `requirements.txt` 3. Install Poetry in this Docker stage. 4. Copy the `pyproject.toml` and `poetry.lock` files to the `/tmp` directory. Because it uses `./poetry.lock*` (ending with a `*`), it won't crash if that file is not available yet. 5. Generate the `requirements.txt` file.
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