aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/docs/tutorial/2-requests-and-responses.md
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorTom Christie2012-09-19 13:02:10 +0100
committerTom Christie2012-09-19 13:02:10 +0100
commit575630d7c34b8ee23dad379c4bbd01eba477e4a2 (patch)
tree69f548477e891c65964a67b7c7805597854bfe37 /docs/tutorial/2-requests-and-responses.md
parent5611769162a022dd7f297074089fe62a4d7f00b1 (diff)
downloaddjango-rest-framework-575630d7c34b8ee23dad379c4bbd01eba477e4a2.tar.bz2
Use named links in tutorial docs
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/tutorial/2-requests-and-responses.md')
-rw-r--r--docs/tutorial/2-requests-and-responses.md16
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/docs/tutorial/2-requests-and-responses.md b/docs/tutorial/2-requests-and-responses.md
index ffc5f269..906f11d0 100644
--- a/docs/tutorial/2-requests-and-responses.md
+++ b/docs/tutorial/2-requests-and-responses.md
@@ -125,11 +125,11 @@ We don't necessarily need to add these extra url patterns in, but it gives us a
## How's it looking?
-Go ahead and test the API from the command line, as we did in [tutorial part 1][2]. Everything is working pretty similarly, although we've got some nicer error handling if we send invalid requests.
+Go ahead and test the API from the command line, as we did in [tutorial part 1][tut-1]. Everything is working pretty similarly, although we've got some nicer error handling if we send invalid requests.
**TODO: Describe using accept headers, content-type headers, and format suffixed URLs**
-Now go and open the API in a web browser, by visiting [http://127.0.0.1:8000/][3]."
+Now go and open the API in a web browser, by visiting [http://127.0.0.1:8000/][devserver]."
**Note: Right now the Browseable API only works with the CBV's. Need to fix that.**
@@ -137,15 +137,15 @@ Now go and open the API in a web browser, by visiting [http://127.0.0.1:8000/][3
Because the API chooses a return format based on what the client asks for, it will, by default, return an HTML-formatted representation of the resource when that resource is requested by a browser. This allows for the API to be easily browsable and usable by humans.
-See the [browsable api][4] topic for more information about the browsable API feature and how to customize it.
+See the [browsable api][browseable-api] topic for more information about the browsable API feature and how to customize it.
## What's next?
-In [tutorial part 3][4], we'll start using class based views, and see how generic views reduce the amount of code we need to write.
+In [tutorial part 3][tut-3], we'll start using class based views, and see how generic views reduce the amount of code we need to write.
[json-url]: http://example.com/api/items/4.json
-[2]: 1-serialization.md
-[3]: http://127.0.0.1:8000/
-[4]: ../topics/browsable-api.md
-[5]: 3-class-based-views.md \ No newline at end of file
+[devserver]: http://127.0.0.1:8000/
+[browseable-api]: ../topics/browsable-api.md
+[tut-1]: 1-serialization.md
+[tut-3]: 3-class-based-views.md \ No newline at end of file