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-rw-r--r--docs/ref/forms/widgets.txt4
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/docs/ref/forms/widgets.txt b/docs/ref/forms/widgets.txt
index c01a7368bd..aa1661f1cb 100644
--- a/docs/ref/forms/widgets.txt
+++ b/docs/ref/forms/widgets.txt
@@ -210,7 +210,7 @@ Customizing widget instances
When Django renders a widget as HTML, it only renders the bare minimum
HTML - Django doesn't add a class definition, or any other widget-specific
attributes. This means that all 'TextInput' widgets will appear the same
-on your web page.
+on your Web page.
If you want to make one widget look different to another, you need to
specify additional attributes for each widget. When you specify a
@@ -235,7 +235,7 @@ each widget will be rendered exactly the same::
<tr><th>Comment:</th><td><input type="text" name="comment" /></td></tr>
-On a real web page, you probably don't want every widget to look the same. You
+On a real Web page, you probably don't want every widget to look the same. You
might want a larger input element for the comment, and you might want the 'name'
widget to have some special CSS class. To do this, you use the ``attrs``
argument when creating the widget: