Proofreading the documentation

This commit is contained in:
Chris Edgemon 2010-04-19 23:25:51 -05:00
parent 4ff9493e57
commit a7ff9dbddd
8 changed files with 58 additions and 58 deletions

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@ -9,10 +9,10 @@ way and why there are multiple ways.
Flask depends on two external libraries: `Werkzeug
<http://werkzeug.pocoo.org/>`_ and `Jinja2 <http://jinja.pocoo.org/2/>`_.
The first on is responsible for interfacing WSGI the latter to render
The first one is responsible for interfacing WSGI the latter for rendering
templates. Now you are maybe asking, what is WSGI? WSGI is a standard
in Python that is basically responsible for ensuring that your application
is behaving in a specific way that you can run it on different
is behaving in a specific way so that you can run it on different
environments (for example on a local development server, on an Apache2, on
lighttpd, on Google's App Engine or whatever you have in mind).
@ -26,10 +26,10 @@ Virtualenv is what you want to use during development and in production if
you have shell access. So first: what does virtualenv do? If you are
like me and you like Python, chances are you want to use it for another
project as well. Now the more projects you have, the more likely it is
that you will be working with different versions of Python itself or a
library involved. Because let's face it: quite often libraries break
backwards compatibility and it's unlikely that your application will
not have any dependencies, that just won't happen. So virtualenv for the
that you will be working with different versions of Python itself or at
least an individual library. Because let's face it: quite often libraries
break backwards compatibility and it's unlikely that your application will
not have any dependencies, that just won't happen. So virtualenv to the
rescue!
It basically makes it possible to have multiple side-by-side
@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ or even better::
$ sudo pip install virtualenv
Changes are you have virtualenv installed on your system then. Maybe it's
Chances are you have virtualenv installed on your system then. Maybe it's
even in your package manager (on ubuntu try ``sudo apt-get install
python-virtualenv``).
@ -152,7 +152,7 @@ Once you have done that it's important to add the `easy_install` command
and other Python scripts to the path. To do that you have to add the
Python installation's Script folder to the `PATH` variable.
To do that, click right on your "Computer" desktop icon and click
To do that, right-click on your "Computer" desktop icon and click
"Properties". On Windows Vista and Windows 7 then click on "Advanced System
settings", on Windows XP click on the "Advanced" tab instead. Then click
on the "Environment variables" button and double click on the "Path"
@ -165,7 +165,7 @@ the following value::
;C:\Python26\Scripts
Then you are done. To check if it worked, open the cmd and execute
Then you are done. To check that it worked, open the cmd and execute
"easy_install". If you have UAC enabled it should prompt you for admin
privileges.