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author | Trevor Turk <trevorturk@gmail.com> | 2013-03-18 06:38:10 -0500 |
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committer | Trevor Turk <trevorturk@gmail.com> | 2013-03-18 06:38:10 -0500 |
commit | 455948c5080031811f11dcc075095a2bb650e61b (patch) | |
tree | f0ecb38bc89005da6d0944fc2d88d87d6a400b3e | |
parent | 7305ef842b675bf965f063de681a96294577fb84 (diff) | |
download | rails-455948c5080031811f11dcc075095a2bb650e61b.tar.gz rails-455948c5080031811f11dcc075095a2bb650e61b.tar.bz2 rails-455948c5080031811f11dcc075095a2bb650e61b.zip |
The default route has been removed
-rw-r--r-- | guides/source/routing.md | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/guides/source/routing.md b/guides/source/routing.md index 24cd12713c..04098f0a5c 100644 --- a/guides/source/routing.md +++ b/guides/source/routing.md @@ -530,7 +530,7 @@ In particular, simple routing makes it very easy to map legacy URLs to new Rails ### Bound Parameters -When you set up a regular route, you supply a series of symbols that Rails maps to parts of an incoming HTTP request. Two of these symbols are special: `:controller` maps to the name of a controller in your application, and `:action` maps to the name of an action within that controller. For example, consider one of the default Rails routes: +When you set up a regular route, you supply a series of symbols that Rails maps to parts of an incoming HTTP request. Two of these symbols are special: `:controller` maps to the name of a controller in your application, and `:action` maps to the name of an action within that controller. For example, consider this route: ```ruby get ':controller(/:action(/:id))' |