From 303dac30c2424d33b9bd9970a0c192193a525f2a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jon Moss Date: Mon, 16 May 2016 15:51:05 -0400 Subject: `md5` --> `MD5` [ci skip] --- guides/source/caching_with_rails.md | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) (limited to 'guides/source/caching_with_rails.md') diff --git a/guides/source/caching_with_rails.md b/guides/source/caching_with_rails.md index 745f09f523..6c734c1d78 100644 --- a/guides/source/caching_with_rails.md +++ b/guides/source/caching_with_rails.md @@ -100,8 +100,8 @@ called key-based expiration. Cache fragments will also be expired when the view fragment changes (e.g., the HTML in the view changes). The string of characters at the end of the key is a -template tree digest. It is an md5 hash computed based on the contents of the -view fragment you are caching. If you change the view fragment, the md5 hash +template tree digest. It is an MD5 hash computed based on the contents of the +view fragment you are caching. If you change the view fragment, the MD5 hash will change, expiring the existing file. TIP: Cache stores like Memcached will automatically delete old cache files. @@ -258,7 +258,7 @@ comment format anywhere in the template, like: If you use a helper method, for example, inside a cached block and you then update that helper, you'll have to bump the cache as well. It doesn't really matter how -you do it, but the md5 of the template file must change. One recommendation is to +you do it, but the MD5 of the template file must change. One recommendation is to simply be explicit in a comment, like: ```html+erb -- cgit v1.2.3