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@@ -107,15 +107,18 @@ middleware is always called on every response.
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``request`` is an :class:`~django.http.HttpRequest` object. ``response`` is the
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:class:`~django.http. HttpResponse` object returned by a Django view.
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-``process_response()`` should return an :class:`~django.http. HttpResponse`
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+``process_response()`` must return an :class:`~django.http. HttpResponse`
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object. It could alter the given ``response``, or it could create and return a
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brand-new :class:`~django.http. HttpResponse`.
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-Remember that your middleware will not be called if another middleware object
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-returns a response before you. But unlike ``process_request()`` and
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-``process_view()``, during the response phase the classes are applied in reverse
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-order, from the bottom up. This means classes defined at the end of
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-:setting:`MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES` will be run first.
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+Unlike the ``process_request()`` and ``process_view()`` methods, the
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+``process_response()`` method is always called, even if the ``process_request()``
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+and ``process_view()`` methods of the same middleware class were skipped because
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+an earlier middleware method returned an :class:`~django.http. HttpResponse`
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+(this means that your ``process_response()`` method cannot rely on setup done in
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+``process_request()``, for example). In addition, during the response phase the
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+classes are applied in reverse order, from the bottom up. This means classes
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+defined at the end of :setting:`MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES` will be run first.
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.. _exception-middleware:
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