diff --git a/general-configuration-guide/multiple-editors.md b/general-configuration-guide/multiple-editors.md index 5298992..6bf09d8 100644 --- a/general-configuration-guide/multiple-editors.md +++ b/general-configuration-guide/multiple-editors.md @@ -8,11 +8,11 @@ keywords: form inline edit Now that you know how to add TinyMCE to your page, and how to use the `inline` mode, it's time to learn how to add multiple editor instances to a single page. -This is in fact a common use case, especially when using TinyMCE's `inline` mode. For example, you may wish to break your content into sections (e.g. titles, paragraphs) that the user can edit individually. +This is, in fact, a common use case, especially when using TinyMCE's `inline` mode. For example, you may wish to break your content into sections (e.g., titles, paragraphs) that the user can edit individually. ## Multiple editor instances sharing the same configuration -In the following example, the page is broken into two separate editable areas, each sharing a single editor configuration. Each individual editable `div` is provided the same `class` of 'myeditablediv'. When the user clicks within the content area TinyMCE will be loaded for just that area. +In the following example, the page is broken into two separate editable areas, each sharing a single editor configuration. Each editable `div` is provided the same `class` of 'myeditablediv'. When the user clicks within the content area, TinyMCE is loaded for just that area. ```html @@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ In the following example, the page is broken into two separate editable areas, e ## Multiple editor instances, each with a unique configuration -In this next example each editable area will be loaded with an instance of TinyMCE with a unique configuration. This is especially helpful when different content areas have different needs. For example, you may want to provide a very simple configuration for editing titles and a more complete configuration for editing body content. This is accomplished by defining a `tinymce.init` object/method for each desired configuration. +In this next example, each editable area is loaded with an instance of TinyMCE with a unique configuration. This is especially helpful when different content areas have different needs. For example, you may want to provide a simple configuration for editing titles and a complete configuration for editing body content. This is accomplished by defining a `tinymce.init` object/method for each desired configuration. ```html