diff --git a/doc/TemplateKeyword.dox b/doc/TemplateKeyword.dox
index e06aba7ba..b84cfdae9 100644
--- a/doc/TemplateKeyword.dox
+++ b/doc/TemplateKeyword.dox
@@ -73,13 +73,13 @@ for operator<".
The reason that the \c template keyword is necessary in the last example has to do with the rules for how
templates are supposed to be compiled in C++. The compiler has to check the code for correct syntax at the
point where the template is defined, without knowing the actual value of the template arguments (\c Derived1
-and \c Derived2 in the example). That means that the compiler cannot know that dst.triangularPart is
+and \c Derived2 in the example). That means that the compiler cannot know that dst.triangularView is
a member template and that the following < symbol is part of the delimiter for the template
-parameter. Another possibility would be that dst.triangularPart is a member variable with the <
+parameter. Another possibility would be that dst.triangularView is a member variable with the <
symbol refering to the operator<() function. In fact, the compiler should choose the second
-possibility, according to the standard. If dst.triangularPart is a member template (as in our case),
+possibility, according to the standard. If dst.triangularView is a member template (as in our case),
the programmer should specify this explicitly with the \c template keyword and write dst.template
-triangularPart.
+triangularView.
The precise rules are rather complicated, but ignoring some subtleties we can summarize them as follows:
- A dependent name is name that depends (directly or indirectly) on a template parameter. In the