Fixed #6753 -- Corrected typo in authentication docs, thanks piem@piem.org and PJCrosier.

git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@7229 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
This commit is contained in:
Gary Wilson Jr 2008-03-12 06:42:09 +00:00
parent 54d5b9ec87
commit 79abd052e7
1 changed files with 12 additions and 12 deletions

View File

@ -83,12 +83,12 @@ Methods
objects in the same way as any other `Django model`_::
myuser.groups = [group_list]
myuser.groups.add(group, group,...)
myuser.groups.remove(group, group,...)
myuser.groups.add(group, group, ...)
myuser.groups.remove(group, group, ...)
myuser.groups.clear()
myuser.user_permissions = [permission_list]
myuser.user_permissions.add(permission, permission, ...)
myuser.user_permissions.remove(permission, permission, ...]
myuser.user_permissions.remove(permission, permission, ...)
myuser.user_permissions.clear()
In addition to those automatic API methods, ``User`` objects have the following
@ -380,14 +380,14 @@ This example shows how you might use both ``authenticate()`` and ``login()``::
# Return an 'invalid login' error message.
.. admonition:: Calling ``authenticate()`` first
When you're manually logging a user in, you *must* call
``authenticate()`` before you call ``login()``. ``authenticate()``
sets an attribute on the ``User`` noting which authentication
backend successfully authenticated that user (see the `backends
documentation`_ for details), and this information is needed later
during the login process.
.. _backends documentation: #other-authentication-sources
Manually checking a user's password
@ -460,7 +460,7 @@ introduced in Python 2.4::
In the Django development version, ``login_required`` also takes an optional
``redirect_field_name`` parameter. Example::
from django.contrib.auth.decorators import login_required
def my_view(request):
@ -468,7 +468,7 @@ In the Django development version, ``login_required`` also takes an optional
my_view = login_required(redirect_field_name='redirect_to')(my_view)
Again, an equivalent example of the more compact decorator syntax introduced in Python 2.4::
from django.contrib.auth.decorators import login_required
@login_required(redirect_field_name='redirect_to')
@ -479,7 +479,7 @@ Again, an equivalent example of the more compact decorator syntax introduced in
* If the user isn't logged in, redirect to ``settings.LOGIN_URL``
(``/accounts/login/`` by default), passing the current absolute URL
in the query string as ``next`` or the value of ``redirect_field_name``.
in the query string as ``next`` or the value of ``redirect_field_name``.
For example:
``/accounts/login/?next=/polls/3/``.
* If the user is logged in, execute the view normally. The view code is
@ -1119,7 +1119,7 @@ object the first time a user authenticates::
Handling authorization in custom backends
-----------------------------------------
Custom auth backends can provide their own permissions.
Custom auth backends can provide their own permissions.
The user model will delegate permission lookup functions
(``get_group_permissions()``, ``get_all_permissions()``, ``has_perm()``, and
@ -1132,9 +1132,9 @@ one backend grants.
The simple backend above could implement permissions for the magic admin fairly
simply::
class SettingsBackend:
# ...
def has_perm(self, user_obj, perm):
@ -1142,7 +1142,7 @@ simply::
return True
else:
return False
This gives full permissions to the user granted access in the above example. Notice
that the backend auth functions all take the user object as an argument, and
they also accept the same arguments given to the associated ``User`` functions.