Fixed #11205 -- Made the links to the str method description look the same as the links to the unicode method description in the tutorial part 1. Having one be fully qualified while the other was not was odd-looking.

git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@10843 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
This commit is contained in:
Karen Tracey 2009-05-26 16:46:56 +00:00
parent 5e20adcdf6
commit 5dc30c9fd2
1 changed files with 3 additions and 3 deletions

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@ -595,16 +595,16 @@ prompt, but also because objects' representations are used throughout Django's
automatically-generated admin.
.. admonition:: Why :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.__unicode__` and not
:meth:`django.db.models.Model.__str__`?
:meth:`~django.db.models.Model.__str__`?
If you're familiar with Python, you might be in the habit of adding
:meth:`django.db.models.Model.__str__` methods to your classes, not
:meth:`~django.db.models.Model.__str__` methods to your classes, not
:meth:`~django.db.models.Model.__unicode__` methods. We use
:meth:`~django.db.models.Model.__unicode__` here because Django models deal
with Unicode by default. All data stored in your database is converted to
Unicode when it's returned.
Django models have a default :meth:`django.db.models.Model.__str__` method
Django models have a default :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.__str__` method
that calls :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.__unicode__` and converts the
result to a UTF-8 bytestring. This means that ``unicode(p)`` will return a
Unicode string, and ``str(p)`` will return a normal string, with characters