This patch does not remove all occurrences of the words in question.
Rather, I went through all of the occurrences of the words listed
below, and judged if they a) suggested the reader had some kind of
knowledge/experience, and b) if they added anything of value (including
tone of voice, etc). I left most of the words alone. I looked at the
following words:
- simply/simple
- easy/easier/easiest
- obvious
- just
- merely
- straightforward
- ridiculous
Thanks to Carlton Gibson for guidance on how to approach this issue, and
to Tim Bell for providing the idea. But the enormous lion's share of
thanks go to Adam Johnson for his patient and helpful review.
Thanks Aymeric Augustin for shepherding the DEP and patch review.
Thanks Marten Kenbeek and Tim Graham for contributing to the code.
Thanks Tom Christie, Shai Berger, and Tim Graham for the docs.
The ``item_enclosures`` hook returns a list of ``Enclosure`` objects which is
then used by the feed builder. If the feed is a RSS feed, an exception is
raised as RSS feeds don't allow multiple enclosures per feed item.
The ``item_enclosures`` hook defaults to an empty list or, if the
``item_enclosure_url`` hook is defined, to a list with a single ``Enclosure``
built from the ``item_enclosure_url``, ``item_enclosure_length``, and
``item_enclosure_mime_type`` hooks.
This makes room for a more general introduction about templating.
Updated some links to point to the new location, but kept those that
didn't talk specifically about the DTL.
Following the app-loading refactor, these objects must live outside of
django.contrib.sites.models because they must be available without
importing the django.contrib.sites.models module when
django.contrib.sites isn't installed.
Refs #21680. Thanks Carl and Loic for reporting this issue.
Some feed aggregators make use of the `published` element as well as
the `updated` element (within the Atom standard -- http://bit.ly/2YySb).
The standard allows for these two elements to be present in the same
entry. `Atom1Feed` had implemented the `updated` element which was
incorrectly taking the date from `pubdate`.