</p>
<p>
However, setting up retriever can be quite tricky since it depends on
-the internal design of the website. This was designed to make life
+the internal design of the website. That was designed to make life
easy for the website's developers, not for you. You'll need to have
some familiarity with HTML, and be willing to adapt when the website
suddenly changes everything without notice.
</p>
<pre>
...
- <div class="main-content">
+ <div class="ArticleWrapper">
<h2>Man Bites Dog</h2>
<img src="mbd.jpg">
<p>
</pre>
<p>
You then specify the tag "div", attribute "class", and value
-"main-content". Everything else in the page, such as navigation
+"ArticleWrapper". Everything else in the page, such as navigation
panels and menus and footers and so on, will be discarded. If there
is more than one section of the page you want to include, specify each
one on a separate row. If the matching section contains some sections
<p>
You can leave the attribute and value blank to include all the
corresponding elements with the specified tag name. You can also use
-a tag name of "*", which will match any element type with the
+a tag name of just an asterisk ("*"), which will match any element type with the
specified attribute regardless of the tag.
</p>
<p>
"URL Replace" fields. The pattern is a regular expression matching
part of the URL to replace. In this case, you might use a pattern of
"/article" and a replace string of "/print/article". A common pattern
-is simply "$", used to add the replace string to the end of the URL.
+is simply a dollar sign ("$"), used to add the replace string to the end of the URL.
</p>
<h3>Background Processing</h3>
<p>