Author: aadamchik
Date: Thu Feb 21 11:55:24 2013
New Revision: 1448614
URL: http://svn.apache.org/r1448614
Log:
typo
Modified:
cayenne/site/cms/trunk/content/docs/3.1/cayenne-guide/lifecycle-events.html
Modified:
cayenne/site/cms/trunk/content/docs/3.1/cayenne-guide/lifecycle-events.html
URL:
http://svn.apache.org/viewvc/cayenne/site/cms/trunk/content/docs/3.1/cayenne-guide/lifecycle-events.html?rev=1448614&r1=1448613&r2=1448614&view=diff
==============================================================================
--- cayenne/site/cms/trunk/content/docs/3.1/cayenne-guide/lifecycle-events.html
(original)
+++ cayenne/site/cms/trunk/content/docs/3.1/cayenne-guide/lifecycle-events.html
Thu Feb 21 11:55:24 2013
@@ -194,7 +194,7 @@ registry.addListener(<span xmlns="http:/
}</pre></div><div class="section" title="Combining Listeners with
DataChannelFilters"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title"><a
name="comining-listeners-with-datachannelfilters"></a>Combining Listeners with
DataChannelFilters</h2></div></div></div><p>A final touch in the listeners
design is preserving the state of the listener within a
single select or commit, so that events generated by multiple
objects can be collected
- and processed all together. To do that you will need to implements
a
+ and processed all together. To do that you will need to implement a
<code class="code">DataChannelFilter</code>, and add some
callback methods to it. They will store
their state in a ThreadLocal variable of the filter. Here is an
example filter that does
something pretty meaningless - counts how many total objects were
committed. However it