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Diffstat (limited to 'docs/content/guide/templates.ngdoc')
| -rw-r--r-- | docs/content/guide/templates.ngdoc | 8 | 
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 4 deletions
| diff --git a/docs/content/guide/templates.ngdoc b/docs/content/guide/templates.ngdoc index fdd90b74..bd8bfd89 100644 --- a/docs/content/guide/templates.ngdoc +++ b/docs/content/guide/templates.ngdoc @@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ These are the types of Angular elements and element attributes you can use in a  * {@link guide/directive Directive} — An attribute or element that    augments an existing DOM element or represents a reusable DOM component - a widget. -* {@link api/ng.$interpolate Markup} — The double +* {@link ng.$interpolate Markup} — The double  curly brace notation `{{ }}` to bind expressions to elements is built-in angular markup.  * {@link filter Filter} — Formats your data for display to the user.  * {@link forms Form controls} — Lets you validate user input. @@ -41,8 +41,8 @@ with {@link expression expressions}:  In a simple single-page app, the template consists of HTML, CSS, and angular directives contained  in just one HTML file (usually `index.html`). In a more complex app, you can display multiple views  within one main page using "partials", which are segments of template located in separate HTML -files.  You "include" the partials in the main page using the {@link api/ngRoute.$route -$route} service in conjunction with the {@link api/ngRoute.directive:ngView ngView} directive. An +files.  You "include" the partials in the main page using the {@link ngRoute.$route +$route} service in conjunction with the {@link ngRoute.directive:ngView ngView} directive. An  example of this technique is shown in the {@link tutorial/ angular tutorial}, in steps seven and  eight. @@ -54,4 +54,4 @@ eight.  ## Related API -* {@link api/index API Reference} +* {@link ./api API Reference} | 
