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Posted to docs-cvs@perl.apache.org by st...@apache.org on 2002/02/06 05:32:17 UTC

cvs commit: modperl-docs/src index_bot.html index_top.html

stas        02/02/05 20:32:17

  Modified:    src      index_bot.html index_top.html
  Log:
  - fix the html to enclose the text in <p> tags
  
  Revision  Changes    Path
  1.3       +1 -1      modperl-docs/src/index_bot.html
  
  Index: index_bot.html
  ===================================================================
  RCS file: /home/cvs/modperl-docs/src/index_bot.html,v
  retrieving revision 1.2
  retrieving revision 1.3
  diff -u -r1.2 -r1.3
  --- index_bot.html	26 Jan 2002 04:24:27 -0000	1.2
  +++ index_bot.html	6 Feb 2002 04:32:17 -0000	1.3
  @@ -3,6 +3,6 @@
         <title>index bottom</title>
       </head>
       <body bgcolor="white">
  -&nbsp;
  +<p>&nbsp;</p>
       </body>
     </html>
  
  
  
  1.2       +14 -14    modperl-docs/src/index_top.html
  
  Index: index_top.html
  ===================================================================
  RCS file: /home/cvs/modperl-docs/src/index_top.html,v
  retrieving revision 1.1
  retrieving revision 1.2
  diff -u -r1.1 -r1.2
  --- index_top.html	5 Jan 2002 19:21:48 -0000	1.1
  +++ index_top.html	6 Feb 2002 04:32:17 -0000	1.2
  @@ -3,24 +3,24 @@
         <title>index top</title>
       </head>
       <body bgcolor="white">
  -mod_perl brings together the full power of the <A
  -HREF="http://www.perl.org">Perl</A> programming language and the <A
  -HREF="http://www.apache.org/">Apache</A> HTTP server.  You can use
  -Perl to <B>manage Apache</B>, <B>respond to requests for web
  -pages</B>, and much more.<P>
  +<p>mod_perl brings together the full power of the <a
  +href="http://www.perl.org">Perl</a> programming language and the <A
  +href="http://www.apache.org/">Apache</a> HTTP server.  You can use
  +Perl to <b>manage Apache</b>, <b>respond to requests for web
  +pages</b>, and much more.</p>
   
  -mod_perl gives you a persistent Perl interpreter embedded in your web
  +<p>mod_perl gives you a persistent Perl interpreter embedded in your web
   server.  This lets you avoid the overhead of starting an external
   interpreter, and avoids the penalty of Perl start-up time, giving you
  -<B>super-fast dynamic content</B>.<P>
  +<b>super-fast dynamic content</b>.</p>
   
  -As you'd expect from the Perl community, there are <B>hundreds of
  -modules</B> written with mod_perl, for everything from <B>persistent
  -database connections</B>, to <B>templating sytems</B>, to complete
  -<B>XML content delivery systems</B>.  Web sites like <B><A
  -HREF="http://www.slashdot.org/">Slashdot</A></B> and <B><A
  -HREF="http://www.wired.com/">Wired Magazine</A></B> use mod_perl.
  -<B>Shouldn't you?</B>
  +<p>As you'd expect from the Perl community, there are <b>hundreds of
  +modules</b> written with mod_perl, for everything from <b>persistent
  +database connections</b>, to <b>templating sytems</b>, to complete
  +<b>XML content delivery systems</b>.  Web sites like <b><A
  +href="http://www.slashdot.org/">Slashdot</a></b> and <b><A
  +href="http://www.wired.com/">Wired Magazine</a></b> use mod_perl.
  +<b>Shouldn't you?</b></p>
   
   
       </body>
  
  
  

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