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  1. 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 { #webhooks-steps }
    
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  2. src/README.vendor

    "vendor/golang.org/x/crypto/cryptobyte". When a package with the
    same path is imported from a package outside std or cmd, it will
    be resolved normally. Consequently, a binary may be built with two
    copies of a package at different versions if the package is
    imported normally and vendored by the standard library.
    
    Vendored packages are internally renamed with a "vendor/" prefix
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  3. docs/en/docs/reference/openapi/index.md

    # OpenAPI
    
    There are several utilities to handle OpenAPI.
    
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  4. docs/en/docs/management-tasks.md

    * `refactor`: Refactors
        * This is normally for changes to the internal code that don't change the behavior. Normally it improves maintainability, or enables future features, etc.
    * `upgrade`: Upgrades
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  5. docs/en/docs/reference/websockets.md

    # WebSockets
    
    When defining WebSockets, you normally declare a parameter of type `WebSocket` and with it you can read data from the client and send data to it.
    
    It is provided directly by Starlette, but you can import it from `fastapi`:
    
    ```python
    from fastapi import WebSocket
    ```
    
    /// tip
    
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  6. docs/en/docs/advanced/using-request-directly.md

    Although any other parameter declared normally (for example, the body with a Pydantic model) would still be validated, converted, annotated, etc.
    
    But there are specific cases where it's useful to get the `Request` object.
    
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  7. docs/en/docs/tutorial/first-steps.md

    * `HEAD`
    * `PATCH`
    * `TRACE`
    
    In the HTTP protocol, you can communicate to each path using one (or more) of these "methods".
    
    ---
    
    When building APIs, you normally use these specific HTTP methods to perform a specific action.
    
    Normally you use:
    
    * `POST`: to create data.
    * `GET`: to read data.
    * `PUT`: to update data.
    * `DELETE`: to delete data.
    
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  8. docs/en/docs/advanced/response-change-status-code.md

    And then you can set the `status_code` in that *temporal* response object.
    
    {* ../../docs_src/response_change_status_code/tutorial001.py hl[1,9,12] *}
    
    And then you can return any object you need, as you normally would (a `dict`, a database model, etc).
    
    And if you declared a `response_model`, it will still be used to filter and convert the object you returned.
    
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  9. docs/en/docs/advanced/behind-a-proxy.md

    These proxies could handle HTTPS certificates and other things.
    
    ## Proxy Forwarded Headers { #proxy-forwarded-headers }
    
    A **proxy** in front of your application would normally set some headers on the fly before sending the requests to your **server** to let the server know that the request was **forwarded** by the proxy, letting it know the original (public) URL, including the domain, that it is using HTTPS, etc.
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  10. docs/en/docs/tutorial/header-params.md

    Also, HTTP headers are case-insensitive, so, you can declare them with standard Python style (also known as "snake_case").
    
    So, you can use `user_agent` as you normally would in Python code, instead of needing to capitalize the first letters as `User_Agent` or something similar.
    
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