diff --git a/docs/tutorial/1-serialization.md b/docs/tutorial/1-serialization.md index 7a9b7cbd8..28fd6b324 100644 --- a/docs/tutorial/1-serialization.md +++ b/docs/tutorial/1-serialization.md @@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ We'll also need to create an initial migration for our snippet model, and sync t The first thing we need to get started on our Web API is to provide a way of serializing and deserializing the snippet instances into representations such as `json`. We can do this by declaring serializers that work very similar to Django's forms. Create a file in the `snippets` directory named `serializers.py` and add the following. from rest_framework import serializers - from snippets.models import Snippet, LANGUAGE_CHOICES, STYLE_CHOICES + from .models import Snippet, LANGUAGE_CHOICES, STYLE_CHOICES class SnippetSerializer(serializers.Serializer): @@ -220,8 +220,8 @@ Edit the `snippets/views.py` file, and add the following. from django.views.decorators.csrf import csrf_exempt from rest_framework.renderers import JSONRenderer from rest_framework.parsers import JSONParser - from snippets.models import Snippet - from snippets.serializers import SnippetSerializer + from .models import Snippet + from .serializers import SnippetSerializer The root of our API is going to be a view that supports listing all the existing snippets, or creating a new snippet.