diff options
author | xue <> | 2005-12-28 14:05:40 +0000 |
---|---|---|
committer | xue <> | 2005-12-28 14:05:40 +0000 |
commit | d109f8356d1dd2c66f66d316ee46a51043731206 (patch) | |
tree | 496db9a84db565856f44e85ad583700930ba9e03 | |
parent | c3bdc43f1b03cbea1849beb58c28d653cc435fe0 (diff) |
-rw-r--r-- | demos/quickstart/protected/pages/Configurations/Templates1.page | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | demos/quickstart/protected/pages/Fundamentals/Applications.page | 2 |
2 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/demos/quickstart/protected/pages/Configurations/Templates1.page b/demos/quickstart/protected/pages/Configurations/Templates1.page index 5d387e14..d9b71d35 100644 --- a/demos/quickstart/protected/pages/Configurations/Templates1.page +++ b/demos/quickstart/protected/pages/Configurations/Templates1.page @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ <com:TContent ID="body" >
<h1>Templates: Part I</h1>
<p>
-Templates are used to specify the presentational layout of controls. A template can contain static text, components, or controls that contribute to the ultimate presentation of the associated control. By default, an instance of <tt>TTemplateControl</tt> or its subclass may automatically load a template from a file whose name is the same as the control class name. For page templates, the file name suffix must be <tt>.page</tt>; for other regular template controls, the suffix is <tt>.tpl</tt>.
+Templates are used to specify the presentational layout of controls. A template can contain static text, components, or controls that contribute to the ultimate presentation of the associated control. By default, an instance of <tt>TTemplateControl</tt> or its subclass may automatically load and instantiate a template from a file whose name is the same as the control class name. For page templates, the file name suffix must be <tt>.page</tt>; for other regular template controls, the suffix is <tt>.tpl</tt>.
</p>
<p>The template format is like HTML, with a few PRADO-specifc tags, including <a href="#ct">component tags</a>, <a href="#tct">template control tags</a>, <a href="#cot">comment tags</a>, <a href="?page=Configurations.Templates2#dct">dynamic content tags</a>, and <a href="?page=Configurations.Templates3#dpt">dynamic property tags</a>. .
</p>
diff --git a/demos/quickstart/protected/pages/Fundamentals/Applications.page b/demos/quickstart/protected/pages/Fundamentals/Applications.page index 8ea9a1f7..df1418fb 100644 --- a/demos/quickstart/protected/pages/Fundamentals/Applications.page +++ b/demos/quickstart/protected/pages/Fundamentals/Applications.page @@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ An application is an instance of <tt>TApplication</tt> or its derived class. It manages modules that provide different functionalities and are loaded when needed. It provides services to end-users. It is the central place to store various parameters used in an application. In a PRADO application, the application instance is the only object that is globally accessible via <tt>Prado::getApplication()</tt> function call.
</p>
<p>
-Applications are configured via <a href="?page=Configurations.AppConfig">application configurations</a>. They are usually created entry scripts like the following,
+Applications are configured via <a href="?page=Configurations.AppConfig">application configurations</a>. They are usually created in entry scripts like the following,
<pre class="source">
require_once('/path/to/prado.php');
$application = new TApplication;
|