From c6fa5bb1cd06ab6d8206ddb4c07572c77f26b9a3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: David Pursehouse Date: Fri, 18 Jul 2014 15:03:29 +0900 Subject: [PATCH] Fix a couple more malformed :meth: and :class: links Change-Id: Ie38844a40ec7a483e6ce5e56077be344242bcd99 --- docs/user/authentication.rst | 2 +- docs/user/quickstart.rst | 9 +++++---- 2 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/docs/user/authentication.rst b/docs/user/authentication.rst index af43bd2..dd0bf2b 100644 --- a/docs/user/authentication.rst +++ b/docs/user/authentication.rst @@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ If you can't find a good implementation of the form of authentication you want, you can implement it yourself. Requests makes it easy to add your own forms of authentication. -To do so, subclass :class:`requests.auth.AuthBase` and implement the +To do so, subclass :class:`AuthBase ` and implement the ``__call__()`` method:: >>> import requests diff --git a/docs/user/quickstart.rst b/docs/user/quickstart.rst index 6bd82f7..73439ed 100644 --- a/docs/user/quickstart.rst +++ b/docs/user/quickstart.rst @@ -32,8 +32,8 @@ timeline :: >>> r = requests.get('https://github.com/timeline.json') -Now, we have a :class:`Response` object called ``r``. We can get all the -information we need from this object. +Now, we have a :class:`Request ` object called ``r``. We can +get all the information we need from this object. Requests' simple API means that all forms of HTTP request are as obvious. For example, this is how you make an HTTP POST request:: @@ -286,8 +286,9 @@ reference:: >>> r.status_code == requests.codes.ok True -If we made a bad request (a 4XX client error or 5XX server error response), we can raise it with -:class:`Response.raise_for_status()`:: +If we made a bad request (a 4XX client error or 5XX server error response), we +can raise it with +:meth:`Response.raise_for_status() `:: >>> bad_r = requests.get('http://httpbin.org/status/404') >>> bad_r.status_code -- 2.34.1