diff --git a/docs/content/tutorial/step_00.ngdoc b/docs/content/tutorial/step_00.ngdoc index 231e873a06c1..1e3c61a01197 100644 --- a/docs/content/tutorial/step_00.ngdoc +++ b/docs/content/tutorial/step_00.ngdoc @@ -173,10 +173,11 @@ __`app/index.html`:__ - The `ng-app` attribute is represents an Angular directive used to flag an element which Angular - should consider to be the root element of our application. This gives application developers the - freedom to tell Angular if the entire html page or only a portion of it should be treated as the - Angular application. + The `ng-app` attribute is represents an Angular directive (named `ngApp`; Angular uses + `name-with-dashes` for attribute names and `camelCase` for the corresponding directive name) + used to flag an element which Angular should consider to be the root element of our application. + This gives application developers the freedom to tell Angular if the entire html page or only a + portion of it should be treated as the Angular application. * AngularJS script tag: diff --git a/docs/content/tutorial/step_06.ngdoc b/docs/content/tutorial/step_06.ngdoc index 84c97babcad6..0df5681bdde3 100644 --- a/docs/content/tutorial/step_06.ngdoc +++ b/docs/content/tutorial/step_06.ngdoc @@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ api/ng.directive:ngSrc ngSrc} directive. That directive prevents the browser from treating the angular `{{ expression }}` markup literally, and initiating a request to invalid url `http://localhost:8000/app/{{phone.imageUrl}}`, which it would have done if we had only specified an attribute binding in a regular `src` attribute (``). -Using `ngSrc` (`ng-src`) prevents the browser from making an http request to an invalid location. +Using the `ngSrc` directive prevents the browser from making an http request to an invalid location. ## Test