From 5b0fee3f65d0cee18356d9fc66cc5c0aabd6c67b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Gallaecio <adriyetichaves@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, 8 Oct 2016 22:17:31 +0200
Subject: [PATCH] Fix WhenSorted() documentation example

---
 googlemock/docs/CheatSheet.md | 2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/googlemock/docs/CheatSheet.md b/googlemock/docs/CheatSheet.md
index ef4451b8..c94c2dac 100644
--- a/googlemock/docs/CheatSheet.md
+++ b/googlemock/docs/CheatSheet.md
@@ -249,7 +249,7 @@ match them more flexibly, or get more informative messages, you can use:
 | `SizeIs(m)`              | `argument` is a container whose size matches `m`. E.g. `SizeIs(2)` or `SizeIs(Lt(2))`.                                           |
 | `UnorderedElementsAre(e0, e1, ..., en)` | `argument` has `n + 1` elements, and under some permutation each element matches an `ei` (for a different `i`), which can be a value or a matcher. 0 to 10 arguments are allowed. |
 | `UnorderedElementsAreArray({ e0, e1, ..., en })`, `UnorderedElementsAreArray(array)`, or `UnorderedElementsAreArray(array, count)` | The same as `UnorderedElementsAre()` except that the expected element values/matchers come from an initializer list, STL-style container, or C-style array. |
-| `WhenSorted(m)`          | When `argument` is sorted using the `<` operator, it matches container matcher `m`. E.g. `WhenSorted(UnorderedElementsAre(1, 2, 3))` verifies that `argument` contains elements `1`, `2`, and `3`, ignoring order. |
+| `WhenSorted(m)`          | When `argument` is sorted using the `<` operator, it matches container matcher `m`. E.g. `WhenSorted(ElementsAre(1, 2, 3))` verifies that `argument` contains elements `1`, `2`, and `3`, ignoring order. |
 | `WhenSortedBy(comparator, m)` | The same as `WhenSorted(m)`, except that the given comparator instead of `<` is used to sort `argument`. E.g. `WhenSortedBy(std::greater<int>(), ElementsAre(3, 2, 1))`. |
 
 Notes: