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  1. licenses/cloud.google.com/go/auth/oauth2adapt/LICENSE

              as modifying the License.
    
          You may add Your own copyright statement to Your modifications and
          may provide additional or different license terms and conditions
          for use, reproduction, or distribution of Your modifications, or
          for any such Derivative Works as a whole, provided Your use,
          reproduction, and distribution of the Work otherwise complies with
    Plain Text
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  2. licenses/cloud.google.com/go/auth/LICENSE

              as modifying the License.
    
          You may add Your own copyright statement to Your modifications and
          may provide additional or different license terms and conditions
          for use, reproduction, or distribution of Your modifications, or
          for any such Derivative Works as a whole, provided Your use,
          reproduction, and distribution of the Work otherwise complies with
    Plain Text
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  3. internal/rest/client.go

    // the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
    // (at your option) any later version.
    //
    // This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful
    // but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
    // MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
    // GNU Affero General Public License for more details.
    //
    // You should have received a copy of the GNU Affero General Public License
    Go
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  4. docs/en/docs/advanced/openapi-webhooks.md

    # OpenAPI Webhooks
    
    There are cases where you want to tell your API **users** that your app could call *their* app (sending a request) with some data, normally to **notify** of some type of **event**.
    
    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
    
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  5. docs/fr/docs/index.md

    ---
    
    "_Nous avons adopté la bibliothèque **FastAPI** pour créer un serveur **REST** qui peut être interrogé pour obtenir des **prédictions**. [pour Ludwig]_"
    
    <div style="text-align: right; margin-right: 10%;">Piero Molino, Yaroslav Dudin et Sai Sumanth Miryala - <strong>Uber</strong> <a href="https://eng.uber.com/ludwig-v0-2/" target="_blank"><small>(ref)</small></a></div>
    
    ---
    
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  6. 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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  7. docs/en/docs/advanced/websockets.md

    ```
    
    </div>
    
    ## WebSockets client
    
    ### In production
    
    In your production system, you probably have a frontend created with a modern framework like React, Vue.js or Angular.
    
    And to communicate using WebSockets with your backend you would probably use your frontend's utilities.
    
    Or you might have a native mobile application that communicates with your WebSocket backend directly, in native code.
    
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  8. docs/en/docs/fastapi-cli.md

    In most cases you would (and should) have a "termination proxy" handling HTTPS for you on top, this will depend on how you deploy your application, your provider might do this for you, or you might need to set it up yourself.
    
    !!! tip
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  9. .github/workflows/codeql-analysis.yml

      schedule:
        - cron: '0 5 * * *'
    
    permissions: {}
    
    jobs:
      CodeQL-Build:
        permissions:
          actions: read  # for github/codeql-action/init to get workflow details
          contents: read  # for actions/checkout to fetch code
          security-events: write  # for github/codeql-action/analyze to upload SARIF results
        runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    
        strategy:
          fail-fast: false
          matrix:
    Others
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  10. docs/en/docs/features.md

    ### Tested
    
    * 100% <abbr title="The amount of code that is automatically tested">test coverage</abbr>.
    * 100% <abbr title="Python type annotations, with this your editor and external tools can give you better support">type annotated</abbr> code base.
    * Used in production applications.
    
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