From b0fab0c5c400bc5ca10908643e8b543767e50a29 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jaime Iniesta Date: Sun, 11 Jul 2010 19:17:36 +0200 Subject: Getting started guide: rephrase the paragraph about the root route for better understanding --- railties/guides/source/getting_started.textile | 9 ++++----- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) (limited to 'railties/guides/source') diff --git a/railties/guides/source/getting_started.textile b/railties/guides/source/getting_started.textile index f547f29087..8e018437fd 100644 --- a/railties/guides/source/getting_started.textile +++ b/railties/guides/source/getting_started.textile @@ -322,16 +322,15 @@ $ rm public/index.html We need to do this as Rails will deliver any static file in the +public+ directory in preference to any dynamic contact we generate from the controllers. -Now, you have to tell Rails where your actual home page is located. Open the file +config/routes.rb+ in your editor. This is your application's _routing file_ which holds entries in a special DSL (domain-specific language) that tells Rails how to connect incoming requests to controllers and actions. There are only comments in this file, so we need to add at the top the following: +Now, you have to tell Rails where your actual home page is located. Open the file +config/routes.rb+ in your editor. This is your application's _routing file_ which holds entries in a special DSL (domain-specific language) that tells Rails how to connect incoming requests to controllers and actions. This file contains many sample routes on commented lines, and one of them actually shows you how to connect the root of your site to a specific controller and action. Find the line beginning with +:root to+, uncomment it and change it like the following: Blog::Application.routes.draw do |map| - root :to => "home#index" - - # The priority is based upon order of creation: - # first created -> highest priority. #... + # You can have the root of your site routed with "root" + # just remember to delete public/index.html. + root :to => "home#index" The +root :to => "home#index"+ tells Rails to map the root action to the home controller's index action. -- cgit v1.2.3