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Hyphenate "class-based"

makes it more readable
pull/392/head
FND 13 years ago
parent
commit
4aebc267bc
  1. 4
      CHANGES
  2. 2
      docs/api.rst
  3. 4
      docs/extensiondev.rst
  4. 4
      docs/views.rst
  5. 8
      flask/views.py

4
CHANGES

@ -89,7 +89,7 @@ Released on September 29th 2011, codename Rakija
variable as well as ``SERVER_NAME`` are now properly used by the test client
as defaults.
- Added :attr:`flask.views.View.decorators` to support simpler decorating of
pluggable (class based) views.
pluggable (class-based) views.
- Fixed an issue where the test client if used with the "with" statement did not
trigger the execution of the teardown handlers.
- Added finer control over the session cookie parameters.
@ -177,7 +177,7 @@ Released on June 28th 2011, codename Grappa
might occur during request processing (for instance database connection
errors, timeouts from remote resources etc.).
- Blueprints can provide blueprint specific error handlers.
- Implemented generic :ref:`views` (class based views).
- Implemented generic :ref:`views` (class-based views).
Version 0.6.1
-------------

2
docs/api.rst

@ -476,7 +476,7 @@ Signals
.. _blinker: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/blinker
Class Based Views
Class-Based Views
-----------------
.. versionadded:: 0.7

4
docs/extensiondev.rst

@ -148,7 +148,7 @@ classes:
a remote application that uses OAuth.
What to use depends on what you have in mind. For the SQLite 3 extension
we will use the class based approach because it will provide users with a
we will use the class-based approach because it will provide users with a
manager object that handles opening and closing database connections.
The Extension Code
@ -203,7 +203,7 @@ So here's what these lines of code do:
5. Finally, we add a `get_db` function that simplifies access to the context's
database.
So why did we decide on a class based approach here? Because using our
So why did we decide on a class-based approach here? Because using our
extension looks something like this::
from flask import Flask

4
docs/views.rst

@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ database and renders into a template::
This is simple and flexible, but if you want to provide this view in a
generic fashion that can be adapted to other models and templates as well
you might want more flexibility. This is where pluggable class based
you might want more flexibility. This is where pluggable class-based
views come into place. As the first step to convert this into a class
based view you would do this::
@ -70,7 +70,7 @@ this by itself is not helpful, so let's refactor the code a bit::
return User.query.all()
This of course is not that helpful for such a small example, but it's good
enough to explain the basic principle. When you have a class based view
enough to explain the basic principle. When you have a class-based view
the question comes up what `self` points to. The way this works is that
whenever the request is dispatched a new instance of the class is created
and the :meth:`~flask.views.View.dispatch_request` method is called with

8
flask/views.py

@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
flask.views
~~~~~~~~~~~
This module provides class based views inspired by the ones in Django.
This module provides class-based views inspired by the ones in Django.
:copyright: (c) 2011 by Armin Ronacher.
:license: BSD, see LICENSE for more details.
@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ class View(object):
#: A for which methods this pluggable view can handle.
methods = None
#: The canonical way to decorate class based views is to decorate the
#: The canonical way to decorate class-based views is to decorate the
#: return value of as_view(). However since this moves parts of the
#: logic from the class declaration to the place where it's hooked
#: into the routing system.
@ -89,7 +89,7 @@ class View(object):
view = decorator(view)
# we attach the view class to the view function for two reasons:
# first of all it allows us to easily figure out what class based
# first of all it allows us to easily figure out what class-based
# view this thing came from, secondly it's also used for instantiating
# the view class so you can actually replace it with something else
# for testing purposes and debugging.
@ -120,7 +120,7 @@ class MethodViewType(type):
class MethodView(View):
"""Like a regular class based view but that dispatches requests to
"""Like a regular class-based view but that dispatches requests to
particular methods. For instance if you implement a method called
:meth:`get` it means you will response to ``'GET'`` requests and
the :meth:`dispatch_request` implementation will automatically

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