<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<commit>
  <added type="array"/>
  <modified type="array">
    <modified>
      <diff>@@ -109,7 +109,7 @@ a set of styles for an attachment, by default it is expected that those
 &quot;styles&quot; are actually &quot;thumbnails&quot;. However, you can do more than just
 thumbnail images. By defining a subclass of Paperclip::Processor, you can
 perform any processing you want on the files that are attached. Any file in
-your Rails app's lib/paperclip_processor directory is automatically loaded by
+your Rails app's lib/paperclip_processors directory is automatically loaded by
 paperclip, allowing you to easily define custom processors. You can specify a
 processor with the :processors option to has_attached_file:
 </diff>
      <filename>README.rdoc</filename>
    </modified>
  </modified>
  <removed type="array"/>
  <parents type="array">
    <parent>
      <id>54a18162974afd96295be29d9fabf542c74d4e93</id>
    </parent>
  </parents>
  <author>
    <name>Jon Yurek</name>
    <email>jyurek@thoughtbot.com</email>
  </author>
  <url>http://github.com/thoughtbot/paperclip/commit/9dd008d95842385d68b1009d2b8966bc18ae4377</url>
  <id>9dd008d95842385d68b1009d2b8966bc18ae4377</id>
  <committed-date>2009-02-07T21:12:17-08:00</committed-date>
  <authored-date>2009-02-07T21:12:17-08:00</authored-date>
  <message>Doc typo fix thanks to Rymai</message>
  <tree>28a7cb7999c3cf2e133b214722400182b1804ee3</tree>
  <committer>
    <name>Jon Yurek</name>
    <email>jyurek@thoughtbot.com</email>
  </committer>
</commit>
