diff options
| author | Josh Schneier <josh.schneier@gmail.com> | 2015-02-04 01:01:59 -0500 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Tim Graham <timograham@gmail.com> | 2015-02-04 07:31:43 -0500 |
| commit | 7d363ed43247a80d2b764723e1bf6e0e6da4e82f (patch) | |
| tree | 9aa2e57ef525d75812d63b7e5651e6bdd5d2275e /docs | |
| parent | 79f27f2b61aeac763ae048416ef8a97c2b639ae8 (diff) | |
Fixed typos of "select_related" in docs and tests.
Diffstat (limited to 'docs')
| -rw-r--r-- | docs/ref/models/querysets.txt | 4 |
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/docs/ref/models/querysets.txt b/docs/ref/models/querysets.txt index c54fa6d014..df0e135e79 100644 --- a/docs/ref/models/querysets.txt +++ b/docs/ref/models/querysets.txt @@ -787,8 +787,8 @@ You can use ``select_related()`` with any queryset of objects:: The order of ``filter()`` and ``select_related()`` chaining isn't important. These querysets are equivalent:: - Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__gt=timezone.now()).selected_related('blog') - Entry.objects.selected_related('blog').filter(pub_date__gt=timezone.now()) + Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__gt=timezone.now()).select_related('blog') + Entry.objects.select_related('blog').filter(pub_date__gt=timezone.now()) You can follow foreign keys in a similar way to querying them. If you have the following models:: |
