Fixed #10039 -- More typos in aggregation docs. Seriously, people, now you're just making me look bad :-) Thanks to ElliottM, and to Erich Holscher for a separate report that I've piggybacked on this checkin.

git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@9754 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
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Russell Keith-Magee 2009-01-15 23:15:32 +00:00
parent bf710bd005
commit b3dd0b5dcc
1 changed files with 2 additions and 2 deletions

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@ -105,7 +105,7 @@ When an ``annotate()`` clause is specified, each object in the ``QuerySet``
will be annotated with the specified values.
The syntax for these annotations is identical to that used for the
``aggregate()`` clause. Each argument to ``annotate()`` describes and
``aggregate()`` clause. Each argument to ``annotate()`` describes an
aggregate that is to be calculated. For example, to annotate Books with
the number of authors::
@ -155,7 +155,7 @@ related value.
For example, to find the price range of books offered in each store,
you could use the annotation::
>>> Store.objects.annotate(min_price=Min('books__price'), max_price=Min('books__price'))
>>> Store.objects.annotate(min_price=Min('books__price'), max_price=Max('books__price'))
This tells Django to retrieve the Store model, join (through the
many-to-many relationship) with the Book model, and aggregate on the