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docs/en/docs/fastapi-cli.md
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docs/fr/docs/fastapi-people.md
{% endfor %} </div> {% endif %} Il existe de nombreux autres contributeurs (plus d'une centaine), vous pouvez les voir tous dans la <a href="https://github.com/tiangolo/fastapi/graphs/contributors" class="external-link" target="_blank">Page des contributeurs de FastAPI GitHub</a>. 👷 ## Principaux Reviewers
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/body-nested-models.md
!!! tip Keep in mind that JSON only supports `str` as keys. But Pydantic has automatic data conversion. This means that, even though your API clients can only send strings as keys, as long as those strings contain pure integers, Pydantic will convert them and validate them. And the `dict` you receive as `weights` will actually have `int` keys and `float` values. ## Recap
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docs/en/docs/advanced/security/http-basic-auth.md
# HTTP Basic Auth For the simplest cases, you can use HTTP Basic Auth. In HTTP Basic Auth, the application expects a header that contains a username and a password. If it doesn't receive it, it returns an HTTP 401 "Unauthorized" error. And returns a header `WWW-Authenticate` with a value of `Basic`, and an optional `realm` parameter. That tells the browser to show the integrated prompt for a username and password.
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docs/en/docs/advanced/response-headers.md
**FastAPI** will use that *temporal* response to extract the headers (also cookies and status code), and will put them in the final response that contains the value you returned, filtered by any `response_model`. You can also declare the `Response` parameter in dependencies, and set headers (and cookies) in them. ## Return a `Response` directly
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docs/en/docs/advanced/additional-responses.md
The correct place is: * In the key `content`, that has as value another JSON object (`dict`) that contains: * A key with the media type, e.g. `application/json`, that contains as value another JSON object, that contains: * A key `schema`, that has as the value the JSON Schema from the model, here's the correct place.
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docs/en/docs/advanced/response-cookies.md
**FastAPI** will use that *temporal* response to extract the cookies (also headers and status code), and will put them in the final response that contains the value you returned, filtered by any `response_model`. You can also declare the `Response` parameter in dependencies, and set cookies (and headers) in them. ## Return a `Response` directly
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/handling-errors.md
You can override these exception handlers with your own. ### Override request validation exceptions When a request contains invalid data, **FastAPI** internally raises a `RequestValidationError`. And it also includes a default exception handler for it.
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docs/en/docs/advanced/templates.md
Then you can write a template at `templates/item.html` with, for example: ```jinja hl_lines="7" {!../../../docs_src/templates/templates/item.html!} ``` ### Template Context Values In the HTML that contains: {% raw %} ```jinja Item ID: {{ id }} ``` {% endraw %} ...it will show the `id` taken from the "context" `dict` you passed: ```Python {"id": id} ```
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docs/en/docs/reference/status.md
# Status Codes You can import the `status` module from `fastapi`: ```python from fastapi import status ``` `status` is provided directly by Starlette. It contains a group of named constants (variables) with integer status codes. For example: * 200: `status.HTTP_200_OK` * 403: `status.HTTP_403_FORBIDDEN` * etc.
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