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authorcewing <cris@crisewing.com>2016-06-03 15:59:53 -0700
committercewing <cris@crisewing.com>2016-06-09 11:20:55 -0700
commit02c5ba3a2cc09948ff49fd9f7c1bcba65050893a (patch)
treed1e4f90d17d753d1aab793cbcd96a95363feed85
parentf920852b93dd4d81dfe1dca12b72ac92140bf37c (diff)
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make title an action
-rw-r--r--docs/narr/introduction.rst18
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/docs/narr/introduction.rst b/docs/narr/introduction.rst
index 6e025f5f7..bbe7df537 100644
--- a/docs/narr/introduction.rst
+++ b/docs/narr/introduction.rst
@@ -81,19 +81,15 @@ Others may provide some, but only Pyramid provides them all, in one place,
fully documented, and useful *à la carte* without needing to pay for the whole
banquet.
-With Pyramid you get:
-Single-file applications
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Build single-file applications
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-You can write a Pyramid application that lives entirely in one Python file, not
-unlike existing Python microframeworks. This is beneficial for one-off
-prototyping, bug reproduction, and very small applications. These applications
-are easy to understand because all the information about the application lives
-in a single place, and you can deploy them without needing to understand much
-about Python distributions and packaging. Pyramid isn't really marketed as a
-microframework, but it allows you to do almost everything that frameworks that
-are marketed as "micro" offer in very similar ways.
+You can write a Pyramid application that lives entirely in one Python file.
+Such an application is easy to understand since everything is in one place. It
+is easy to deploy because you don't need to know much about Python packaging.
+Pyramid allows you to do almost everything that so-called *microframeworks* can
+in very similar ways.
.. literalinclude:: helloworld.py