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-rw-r--r--docs/ref/applications.txt8
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/docs/ref/applications.txt b/docs/ref/applications.txt
index ed3f33a2cc..0713da76ed 100644
--- a/docs/ref/applications.txt
+++ b/docs/ref/applications.txt
@@ -59,7 +59,7 @@ For application authors
If you're creating a pluggable app called "Rock ’n’ roll", here's how you
would provide a proper name for the admin::
- # rock_n_roll/app.py
+ # rock_n_roll/apps.py
from django.apps import AppConfig
@@ -67,11 +67,11 @@ would provide a proper name for the admin::
name = 'rock_n_roll'
verbose_name = "Rock ’n’ roll"
-You would then tell your users to add ``'rock_n_roll.app.RockNRollConfig'`` to
-their :setting:`INSTALLED_APPS`.
+You would then tell your users to add ``'rock_n_roll.apps.RockNRollConfig'``
+to their :setting:`INSTALLED_APPS`.
The recommended convention is to put the configuration class in a submodule of
-the application called ``app``. However, this isn't enforced by Django.
+the application called ``apps``. However, this isn't enforced by Django.
You must include the :attr:`~django.apps.AppConfig.name` attribute for Django
to determine which application this configuration applies to. You can define