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  1. tests/test_tutorial/test_path_operation_advanced_configurations/test_tutorial001.py

                                "content": {"application/json": {"schema": {}}},
                            }
                        },
                        "summary": "Read Items",
                        "operationId": "some_specific_id_you_define",
                    }
                }
            },
    Python
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  2. docs_src/openapi_callbacks/tutorial001.py

    @app.post("/invoices/", callbacks=invoices_callback_router.routes)
    def create_invoice(invoice: Invoice, callback_url: Union[HttpUrl, None] = None):
        """
        Create an invoice.
    
        This will (let's imagine) let the API user (some external developer) create an
        invoice.
    
        And this path operation will:
    
        * Send the invoice to the client.
        * Collect the money from the client.
    Python
    - Registered: Sun May 05 07:19:11 GMT 2024
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  3. tests/test_starlette_exception.py

    @app.get("/items/{item_id}")
    async def read_item(item_id: str):
        if item_id not in items:
            raise HTTPException(
                status_code=404,
                detail="Item not found",
                headers={"X-Error": "Some custom header"},
            )
        return {"item": items[item_id]}
    
    
    @app.get("/http-no-body-statuscode-exception")
    async def no_body_status_code_exception():
        raise HTTPException(status_code=204)
    
    
    Python
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  4. docs/en/docs/how-to/custom-request-and-route.md

    # Custom Request and APIRoute class
    
    In some cases, you may want to override the logic used by the `Request` and `APIRoute` classes.
    
    In particular, this may be a good alternative to logic in a middleware.
    
    For example, if you want to read or manipulate the request body before it is processed by your application.
    
    !!! danger
        This is an "advanced" feature.
    
        If you are just starting with **FastAPI** you might want to skip this section.
    
    Plain Text
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  5. docs/en/docs/tutorial/bigger-applications.md

    * and from it, import the function `get_token_header`.
    
    That would refer to some package above `app/`, with its own file `__init__.py`, etc. But we don't have that. So, that would throw an error in our example. 🚨
    
    But now you know how it works, so you can use relative imports in your own apps no matter how complex they are. 🤓
    
    ### Add some custom `tags`, `responses`, and `dependencies`
    
    Plain Text
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  6. docs/en/docs/python-types.md

    ```Python hl_lines="2"
    {!../../../docs_src/python_types/tutorial001.py!}
    ```
    
    ### 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".
    
    Plain Text
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  7. docs/en/docs/tutorial/first-steps.md

    <font color="#3465A4">INFO    </font> Resolved absolute path <font color="#75507B">/home/user/code/awesomeapp/</font><font color="#AD7FA8">main.py</font>
    <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>
    
    Plain Text
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  8. docs/en/docs/advanced/behind-a-proxy.md

    # Behind a Proxy
    
    In some situations, you might need to use a **proxy** server like Traefik or Nginx with a configuration that adds an extra path prefix that is not seen by your application.
    
    In these cases you can use `root_path` to configure your application.
    
    The `root_path` is a mechanism provided by the ASGI specification (that FastAPI is built on, through Starlette).
    
    The `root_path` is used to handle these specific cases.
    
    Plain Text
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  9. docs/en/docs/tutorial/dependencies/global-dependencies.md

    # Global Dependencies
    
    For some types of applications you might want to add dependencies to the whole application.
    
    Similar to the way you can [add `dependencies` to the *path operation decorators*](dependencies-in-path-operation-decorators.md){.internal-link target=_blank}, you can add them to the `FastAPI` application.
    
    In that case, they will be applied to all the *path operations* in the application:
    
    === "Python 3.9+"
    
        ```Python hl_lines="16"
    Plain Text
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  10. docs/en/docs/how-to/async-sql-encode-databases.md

    ### About `{**note.dict(), "id": last_record_id}`
    
    `note` is a Pydantic `Note` object.
    
    `note.dict()` returns a `dict` with its data, something like:
    
    ```Python
    {
        "text": "Some note",
        "completed": False,
    }
    ```
    
    but it doesn't have the `id` field.
    
    So we create a new `dict`, that contains the key-value pairs from `note.dict()` with:
    
    ```Python
    {**note.dict()}
    ```
    Plain Text
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