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authorJoey Hess <joey@gnu.kitenet.net>2008-12-31 13:33:10 -0500
committerJoey Hess <joey@gnu.kitenet.net>2008-12-31 13:33:10 -0500
commitffec6806087981420eaf83c8d83cc4523a46d0de (patch)
treeea6c5462ab1ced6288492bdb01424488b76089ce /doc/plugins/write.mdwn
parent8c571160cf32be6e9c2698d1a02f95d7bdf073b1 (diff)
parent3e8b7a6b196767d2c7d21790b6ed7c3fb5f70d31 (diff)
Merge branch 'next'
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/plugins/write.mdwn')
-rw-r--r--doc/plugins/write.mdwn6
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/doc/plugins/write.mdwn b/doc/plugins/write.mdwn
index 9b5cf27f7..405876d58 100644
--- a/doc/plugins/write.mdwn
+++ b/doc/plugins/write.mdwn
@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ that can be fleshed out to make a useful plugin.
`IkiWiki::Plugin::pagecount` is another simple example. All perl plugins
should `use IkiWiki` to import the ikiwiki plugin interface. It's a good
idea to include the version number of the plugin interface that your plugin
-expects: `use IkiWiki 2.00`.
+expects: `use IkiWiki 3.00`.
An external plugin is an executable program. It can be written in any
language. Its interface to ikiwiki is via XML RPC, which it reads from
@@ -431,7 +431,7 @@ describes the plugin as a whole. For example:
To import the ikiwiki plugin interface:
- use IkiWiki '2.00';
+ use IkiWiki '3.00';
This will import several variables and functions into your plugin's
namespace. These variables and functions are the ones most plugins need,
@@ -486,7 +486,7 @@ use the following hashes, using a page name as the key:
destination file.
* `%pagesources` contains the name of the source file for each page.
-Also, the %IkiWiki::version variable contains the version number for the
+Also, the `%IkiWiki::version` variable contains the version number for the
ikiwiki program.
### Library functions