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

       4. Redistribution. You may reproduce and distribute copies of the
          Work or Derivative Works thereof in any medium, with or without
          modifications, and in Source or Object form, provided that You
          meet the following conditions:
    
          (a) You must give any other recipients of the Work or
              Derivative Works a copy of this License; and
    
          (b) You must cause any modified files to carry prominent notices
    Plain Text
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  2. docs/en/docs/tutorial/dependencies/index.md

        ```
    
    Although you use `Depends` in the parameters of your function the same way you use `Body`, `Query`, etc, `Depends` works a bit differently.
    
    You only give `Depends` a single parameter.
    
    This parameter must be something like a function.
    
    You **don't call it** directly (don't add the parenthesis at the end), you just pass it as a parameter to `Depends()`.
    
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  3. docs/en/docs/features.md

    With **FastAPI** you get all of **Pydantic**'s features (as FastAPI is based on Pydantic for all the data handling):
    
    * **No brainfuck**:
        * No new schema definition micro-language to learn.
        * If you know Python types you know how to use Pydantic.
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  4. docs/en/docs/tutorial/security/simple-oauth2.md

        {!> ../../../docs_src/security/tutorial003.py!}
        ```
    
    !!! tip
        By the spec, you should return a JSON with an `access_token` and a `token_type`, the same as in this example.
    
        This is something that you have to do yourself in your code, and make sure you use those JSON keys.
    
        It's almost the only thing that you have to remember to do correctly yourself, to be compliant with the specifications.
    
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  5. docs/en/docs/deployment/concepts.md

    ## Running on Startup
    
    In most cases, when you create a web API, you want it to be **always running**, uninterrupted, so that your clients can always access it. This is of course, unless you have a specific reason why you want it to run only in certain situations, but most of the time you want it constantly running and **available**.
    
    ### In a Remote Server
    
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  6. fastapi/datastructures.py

    
    class UploadFile(StarletteUploadFile):
        """
        A file uploaded in a request.
    
        Define it as a *path operation function* (or dependency) parameter.
    
        If you are using a regular `def` function, you can use the `upload_file.file`
        attribute to access the raw standard Python file (blocking, not async), useful and
        needed for non-async code.
    
        Read more about it in the
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  7. docs/en/docs/reference/httpconnection.md

    # `HTTPConnection` class
    
    When you want to define dependencies that should be compatible with both HTTP and WebSockets, you can define a parameter that takes an `HTTPConnection` instead of a `Request` or a `WebSocket`.
    
    You can import it from `fastapi.requests`:
    
    ```python
    from fastapi.requests import HTTPConnection
    ```
    
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  8. docs/en/docs/advanced/websockets.md

    # WebSockets
    
    You can use <a href="https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/WebSockets_API" class="external-link" target="_blank">WebSockets</a> with **FastAPI**.
    
    ## Install `WebSockets`
    
    First you need to install `WebSockets`:
    
    <div class="termy">
    
    ```console
    $ pip install websockets
    
    ---> 100%
    ```
    
    </div>
    
    ## WebSockets client
    
    ### In production
    
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  9. docs/en/docs/python-types.md

    ### Edit it
    
    It's a very simple program.
    
    But now imagine that you were writing it from scratch.
    
    At some point you would have started the definition of the function, you had the parameters ready...
    
    But then you have to call "that method that converts the first letter to upper case".
    
    Was it `upper`? Was it `uppercase`? `first_uppercase`? `capitalize`?
    
    Then, you try with the old programmer's friend, editor autocompletion.
    
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  10. docs/en/docs/tutorial/body-nested-models.md

    ## Bodies of arbitrary `dict`s
    
    You can also declare a body as a `dict` with keys of some type and values of some other type.
    
    This way, you don't have to know beforehand what the valid field/attribute names are (as would be the case with Pydantic models).
    
    This would be useful if you want to receive keys that you don't already know.
    
    ---
    
    Another useful case is when you want to have keys of another type (e.g., `int`).
    
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