diff --git a/docs/patterns/templateinheritance.rst b/docs/patterns/templateinheritance.rst index 70015ecc..1292f26e 100644 --- a/docs/patterns/templateinheritance.rst +++ b/docs/patterns/templateinheritance.rst @@ -28,14 +28,15 @@ document that you might use for a simple two-column page. It's the job of {% block title %}{% endblock %} - My Webpage {% endblock %} - -
{% block content %}{% endblock %}
- - + +
{% block content %}{% endblock %}
+ + + In this example, the ``{% block %}`` tags define four blocks that child templates can fill in. All the `block` tag does is tell the template engine that a diff --git a/docs/quickstart.rst b/docs/quickstart.rst index e9d6b388..421235dc 100644 --- a/docs/quickstart.rst +++ b/docs/quickstart.rst @@ -38,15 +38,14 @@ should see your hello world greeting. So what did that code do? 1. First we imported the :class:`~flask.Flask` class. An instance of this - class will be our WSGI application. The first argument is the name of - the application's module. If you are using a single module (as in this - example), you should use `__name__` because depending on if it's started as - application or imported as module the name will be different (``'__main__'`` - versus the actual import name). For more information, have a look at the - :class:`~flask.Flask` documentation. -2. Next we create an instance of this class. We pass it the name of the module - or package. This is needed so that Flask knows where to look for templates, - static files, and so on. + class will be our WSGI application. +2. Next we create an instance of this class. The first argument is the name of + the application's module or package. If you are using a single module (as + in this example), you should use `__name__` because depending on if it's + started as application or imported as module the name will be different + (``'__main__'`` versus the actual import name). This is needed so that + Flask knows where to look for templates, static files, and so on. For more + information have a look at the :class:`~flask.Flask` documentation. 3. We then use the :meth:`~flask.Flask.route` decorator to tell Flask what URL should trigger our function. 4. The function is given a name which is also used to generate URLs for that