diff --git a/docs_md/core_manual_js.md b/docs_md/core_manual_js.md index aa68b6b..0f096b5 100644 --- a/docs_md/core_manual_js.md +++ b/docs_md/core_manual_js.md @@ -1984,11 +1984,11 @@ You can then add different matches to the route matcher. For example, to send al var routeMatcher = new vertx.RouteMatcher(); routeMatcher.get('/animals/dogs', function(req) { - req.response().end('You requested dogs'); + req.response.end('You requested dogs'); }); routeMatcher.get('/animals/cats', function(req) { - req.response().end('You requested cats'); + req.response.end('You requested cats'); }); server.requestHandler(routeMatcher).listen(8080, 'localhost'); @@ -2014,7 +2014,7 @@ If you want to extract parameters from the path, you can do this too, by using t routeMatcher.put('/:blogname/:post', function(req) { var blogName = req.params().get('blogname'); var post = req.params().get('post'); - req.response().end('blogname is ' + blogName + ', post is ' + post); + req.response.end('blogname is ' + blogName + ', post is ' + post); }); server.requestHandler(routeMatcher).listen(8080, 'localhost'); @@ -2058,7 +2058,7 @@ It will display 'first is animals and second is cats'. You can use the `noMatch` method to specify a handler that will be called if nothing matches. If you don't specify a no match handler and nothing matches, a 404 will be returned. routeMatcher.noMatch(function(req) { - req.response().end('Nothing matched'); + req.response.end('Nothing matched'); }); # WebSockets