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-rw-r--r--guides/source/action_view_overview.md26
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 23 deletions
diff --git a/guides/source/action_view_overview.md b/guides/source/action_view_overview.md
index 3541bbaa93..950bb5e358 100644
--- a/guides/source/action_view_overview.md
+++ b/guides/source/action_view_overview.md
@@ -317,26 +317,6 @@ The `box` layout simply wraps the `_article` partial in a `div`:
</div>
```
-The `_article` partial wraps the article's `body` in a `div` with the `id` of the article using the `div_for` helper:
-
-**articles/_article.html.erb**
-
-```html+erb
-<%= div_for(article) do %>
- <p><%= article.body %></p>
-<% end %>
-```
-
-this would output the following:
-
-```html
-<div class='box'>
- <div id='article_1'>
- <p>Partial Layouts are cool!</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-```
-
Note that the partial layout has access to the local `article` variable that was passed into the `render` call. However, unlike application-wide layouts, partial layouts still have the underscore prefix.
You can also render a block of code within a partial layout instead of calling `yield`. For example, if we didn't have the `_article` partial, we could do this instead:
@@ -345,9 +325,9 @@ You can also render a block of code within a partial layout instead of calling `
```html+erb
<% render(layout: 'box', locals: { article: @article }) do %>
- <%= div_for(article) do %>
+ <div>
<p><%= article.body %></p>
- <% end %>
+ </div>
<% end %>
```
@@ -552,7 +532,7 @@ end
```ruby
atom_feed do |feed|
feed.title("Articles Index")
- feed.updated((@articles.first.created_at))
+ feed.updated(@articles.first.created_at)
@articles.each do |article|
feed.entry(article) do |entry|