Fixed #4690 -- Fixed a bunch of ReST errors in docs. Thanks, Paul B.

git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@5571 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
This commit is contained in:
Adrian Holovaty 2007-07-01 01:00:23 +00:00
parent 3336bd5c3d
commit 510e545776
8 changed files with 12 additions and 12 deletions

View File

@ -461,7 +461,7 @@ block::
Other built-in views
--------------------
In addition to the `login` view, the authentication system includes a
In addition to the ``login`` view, the authentication system includes a
few other useful built-in views:
``django.contrib.auth.views.logout``

View File

@ -1831,7 +1831,7 @@ use the default manager, or if you want to search a list of related objects,
you can provide ``get_object_or_404()`` with a manager object instead.
For example::
# Get the author of blog instance `e` with a name of 'Fred'
# Get the author of blog instance e with a name of 'Fred'
a = get_object_or_404(e.authors, name='Fred')
# Use a custom manager 'recent_entries' in the search for an

View File

@ -513,7 +513,7 @@ Example usage::
Verbosity determines the amount of notification and debug information that
will be printed to the console. '0' is no output, '1' is normal output,
and `2` is verbose output.
and ``2`` is verbose output.
--adminmedia
------------

View File

@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ You'll need to tell Django what your database connection parameters are, and
what the name of the database is. Do that by editing these settings in your
`settings file`_:
* `DATABASE_NAME`
* `DATABASE_NAME`_
* `DATABASE_ENGINE`_
* `DATABASE_USER`_
* `DATABASE_PASSWORD`_

View File

@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ The following changes may require you to update your code when you switch from
Due to a bug in older versions of the ``MySQLdb`` Python module (which
Django uses to connect to MySQL databases), Django's MySQL backend now
requires version 1.2.1p2 or higher of `MySQLdb`, and will raise
requires version 1.2.1p2 or higher of ``MySQLdb``, and will raise
exceptions if you attempt to use an older version.
If you're currently unable to upgrade your copy of ``MySQLdb`` to meet

View File

@ -48,12 +48,12 @@ Subset of fields
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If you only want a subset of fields to be serialized, you can
specify a `fields` argument to the serializer::
specify a ``fields`` argument to the serializer::
from django.core import serializers
data = serializers.serialize('xml', SomeModel.objects.all(), fields=('name','size'))
In this example, only the `name` and `size` attributes of each model will
In this example, only the ``name`` and ``size`` attributes of each model will
be serialized.
.. note::

View File

@ -253,8 +253,8 @@ can be invoked on the ``Client`` instance.
f.close()
will result in the evaluation of a POST request on ``/customers/wishes/``,
with a POST dictionary that contains `name`, `attachment` (containing the
file name), and `attachment_file` (containing the file data). Note that you
with a POST dictionary that contains ``name``, ``attachment`` (containing the
file name), and ``attachment_file`` (containing the file data). Note that you
need to manually close the file after it has been provided to the POST.
``login(**credentials)``
@ -660,8 +660,8 @@ arguments:
tested. This is the same format returned by ``django.db.models.get_apps()``
Verbosity determines the amount of notification and debug information that
will be printed to the console; `0` is no output, `1` is normal output,
and `2` is verbose output.
will be printed to the console; ``0`` is no output, ``1`` is normal output,
and ``2`` is verbose output.
This method should return the number of tests that failed.

View File

@ -360,7 +360,7 @@ Note the following:
quotes. The author of this tutorial runs PostgreSQL, so the example
output is in PostgreSQL syntax.
* The `sql` command doesn't actually run the SQL in your database - it just
* The ``sql`` command doesn't actually run the SQL in your database - it just
prints it to the screen so that you can see what SQL Django thinks is required.
If you wanted to, you could copy and paste this SQL into your database prompt.
However, as we will see shortly, Django provides an easier way of committing