@@ -120,7 +120,7 @@ Thanks to these two routes:
120120
121121* If the user goes to ``/blog/* ``, the second route is matched and ``showAction() ``
122122 is executed. Because the route path is ``/blog/{slug} ``, a ``$slug `` variable is
123- passed to ``showAction `` matching that value. For example, if the user goes to
123+ passed to ``showAction() `` matching that value. For example, if the user goes to
124124 ``/blog/yay-routing ``, then ``$slug `` will equal ``yay-routing ``.
125125
126126Whenever you have a ``{placeholder} `` in your route path, that portion becomes a
@@ -502,11 +502,11 @@ The pattern has three parts, each separated by a colon:
502502
503503For example, a ``_controller `` value of ``AppBundle:Blog:show `` means:
504504
505- ============= ================== ==============
505+ ============= ================== ================
506506Bundle Controller Class Method Name
507- ============= ================== ==============
508- ``AppBundle `` ``BlogController `` ``showAction ``
509- ============= ================== ==============
507+ ============= ================== ================
508+ ``AppBundle `` ``BlogController `` ``showAction() ``
509+ ============= ================== ================
510510
511511The controller might look like this::
512512
@@ -524,7 +524,7 @@ The controller might look like this::
524524 }
525525
526526Notice that Symfony adds the string ``Controller `` to the class name (``Blog ``
527- => ``BlogController ``) and ``Action `` to the method name (``show `` => ``showAction ``).
527+ => ``BlogController ``) and ``Action `` to the method name (``show `` => ``showAction() ``).
528528
529529You could also refer to this controller using its fully-qualified class name
530530and method: ``AppBundle\Controller\BlogController::showAction ``. But if you