From dcb6fa8099ce1879b064b00f80f38cfbdee3a0de Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: "Miss Islington (bot)"
 <31488909+miss-islington@users.noreply.github.com>
Date: Thu, 28 Jul 2022 03:32:20 -0700
Subject: [PATCH] Docs: Fix refs & tweak wording in sqlite3 'Using shortcut
 methods' (#95358)

Co-authored-by: CAM Gerlach <CAM.Gerlach@Gerlach.CAM>
(cherry picked from commit ea269b9a380a52828d4e401fa695737bcd699398)

Co-authored-by: Erlend Egeberg Aasland <erlend.aasland@protonmail.com>
---
 Doc/library/sqlite3.rst | 5 +++--
 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

diff --git a/Doc/library/sqlite3.rst b/Doc/library/sqlite3.rst
index 3ce598c6ff1..87c648ddda1 100644
--- a/Doc/library/sqlite3.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/sqlite3.rst
@@ -1336,8 +1336,9 @@ Using :mod:`sqlite3` efficiently
 Using shortcut methods
 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 
-Using the nonstandard :meth:`execute`, :meth:`executemany` and
-:meth:`executescript` methods of the :class:`Connection` object, your code can
+Using the :meth:`~Connection.execute`,
+:meth:`~Connection.executemany`, and :meth:`~Connection.executescript`
+methods of the :class:`Connection` class, your code can
 be written more concisely because you don't have to create the (often
 superfluous) :class:`Cursor` objects explicitly. Instead, the :class:`Cursor`
 objects are created implicitly and these shortcut methods return the cursor
-- 
GitLab