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okhttp/src/commonJvmAndroid/kotlin/okhttp3/internal/http/DateFormatting.kt
var result = STANDARD_DATE_FORMAT.get().parse(this, position) if (position.index == length) { // STANDARD_DATE_FORMAT must match exactly; all text must be consumed, e.g. no ignored // non-standard trailing "+01:00". Those cases are covered below. return result } synchronized(BROWSER_COMPATIBLE_DATE_FORMAT_STRINGS) { for (i in 0 until BROWSER_COMPATIBLE_DATE_FORMAT_STRINGS.size) {
Created: Fri Apr 03 11:42:14 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Fri Dec 27 13:39:56 GMT 2024 - 4.1K bytes - Click Count (0) -
android/guava-testlib/src/com/google/common/testing/SerializableTester.java
* {@linkplain Object#equals equal} to the original, nor is it required to return even an object * of the same class. For example, if sublists of {@code MyList} instances were serializable, * those sublists might implement a private {@code MySubList} type but serialize as a plain {@code * MyList} to save space. So long as {@code MyList} has all the public supertypes of {@codeCreated: Fri Apr 03 12:43:13 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Sat Dec 21 14:50:24 GMT 2024 - 4.1K bytes - Click Count (0) -
android/guava-tests/test/com/google/common/base/AndroidIncompatible.java
import java.lang.annotation.Target; /** * Signifies that a test should not be run under Android. This annotation is respected only by our * Google-internal Android suite generators. Note that those generators also suppress any test * annotated with LargeTest. * * <p>Why use a custom annotation instead of {@code android.test.suitebuilder.annotation.Suppress}?Created: Fri Apr 03 12:43:13 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Fri Jul 07 15:40:13 GMT 2023 - 3.9K bytes - Click Count (0) -
guava/src/com/google/common/collect/ForwardingBlockingDeque.java
* provided {@code standardOffer} method. * * <p><b>{@code default} method warning:</b> This class does <i>not</i> forward calls to {@code * default} methods. Instead, it inherits their default implementations. When those implementations * invoke methods, they invoke methods on the {@code ForwardingBlockingDeque}. * * <p>The {@code standard} methods are not guaranteed to be thread-safe, even when all of theCreated: Fri Apr 03 12:43:13 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Sun Dec 22 03:38:46 GMT 2024 - 4.3K bytes - Click Count (0) -
guava/src/com/google/common/collect/ForwardingDeque.java
* override {@code offer} as well. * * <p><b>{@code default} method warning:</b> This class does <i>not</i> forward calls to {@code * default} methods. Instead, it inherits their default implementations. When those implementations * invoke methods, they invoke methods on the {@code ForwardingDeque}. * * @author Kurt Alfred Kluever * @since 12.0 */ @J2ktIncompatible @GwtIncompatibleCreated: Fri Apr 03 12:43:13 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Sun Dec 22 03:38:46 GMT 2024 - 4.1K bytes - Click Count (0) -
src/bytes/boundary_test.go
//go:build linux package bytes_test import ( . "bytes" "syscall" "testing" ) // This file tests the situation where byte operations are checking // data very near to a page boundary. We want to make sure those // operations do not read across the boundary and cause a page // fault where they shouldn't. // These tests run only on linux. The code being tested is // not OS-specific, so it does not need to be tested on all
Created: Tue Apr 07 11:13:11 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Thu Nov 30 20:05:58 GMT 2023 - 2.8K bytes - Click Count (0) -
docs/en/docs/tutorial/query-params-str-validations.md
We had this type annotation: ```Python q: str | None = None ``` What we will do is wrap that with `Annotated`, so it becomes: ```Python q: Annotated[str | None] = None ``` Both of those versions mean the same thing, `q` is a parameter that can be a `str` or `None`, and by default, it is `None`. Now let's jump to the fun stuff. 🎉
Created: Sun Apr 05 07:19:11 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Thu Mar 05 18:13:19 GMT 2026 - 16.3K bytes - Click Count (0) -
docs/en/docs/advanced/generate-clients.md
### API Docs { #api-docs } If you go to `/docs`, you will see that it has the **schemas** for the data to be sent in requests and received in responses: <img src="/img/tutorial/generate-clients/image01.png"> You can see those schemas because they were declared with the models in the app. That information is available in the app's **OpenAPI schema**, and then shown in the API docs.Created: Sun Apr 05 07:19:11 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Thu Mar 05 18:13:19 GMT 2026 - 9.7K bytes - Click Count (1) -
architecture/standards/0007-java-pre-requisite.md
* The [Gradle Tooling API client](https://docs.gradle.org/8.8/userguide/third_party_integration.html#embedding) * This requires a Java application, and thus runtime, to run the tooling API client As indicated, each of those components require a Java runtime to run. The recommended way of invoking Gradle is to use the Gradle Wrapper.
Created: Wed Apr 01 11:36:16 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Thu Mar 05 12:39:41 GMT 2026 - 3.2K bytes - Click Count (0) -
docs/en/docs/how-to/custom-request-and-route.md
A `Request` also has a `request.receive`, that's a function to "receive" the body of the request. The `scope` `dict` and `receive` function are both part of the ASGI specification. And those two things, `scope` and `receive`, are what is needed to create a new `Request` instance. To learn more about the `Request` check [Starlette's docs about Requests](https://www.starlette.dev/requests/). ///
Created: Sun Apr 05 07:19:11 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Thu Mar 05 18:13:19 GMT 2026 - 4.4K bytes - Click Count (0)