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authorBrian S. O'Neill <bronee@gmail.com>2006-11-15 16:09:19 +0000
committerBrian S. O'Neill <bronee@gmail.com>2006-11-15 16:09:19 +0000
commitf505b736569fed9edc2a1378048f269fd88c3f21 (patch)
treeca8605a3c3bb42d1663988ce706ac71e2aa71b23 /src/site/apt
parent780673c25c269f9794d2896e8875b7cab0c4b7a4 (diff)
Minor typo fix.
Diffstat (limited to 'src/site/apt')
-rw-r--r--src/site/apt/index.apt4
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/src/site/apt/index.apt b/src/site/apt/index.apt
index c3cae06..06173b7 100644
--- a/src/site/apt/index.apt
+++ b/src/site/apt/index.apt
@@ -20,8 +20,8 @@ databases.
Defining new types in Carbonado involves creating an interface or abstract
class which follows Java bean conventions. Additional information is specified
by inserting special annotations. At the very least, an annotation is required
-to specify the primary key. Annotations are feature first available in Java 5,
-and as a result, Carbonado depends on Java 5.
+to specify the primary key. Annotations are a feature first available in Java
+5, and as a result, Carbonado depends on Java 5.
On the surface, it may appear that Carbonado types are defined like POJOs.
The difference is that in Carbonado, types are object representations of