-:func:`memcached_cas` overwrites data in the server as long as the "cas"
-value is still the same in the server. You can get the cas value of a result
-by calling :func:`memcached_result_cas` on a memcached_result_st(3)
-structure. At the point that this note was written cas is still buggy in memcached.
-Turning on tests for it in libmemcached(3) is optional. Please see
-:func:`memcached_set` for information on how to do this.
-
-:func:`memcached_cas_by_key` method behaves in a similar method as the non
-key methods. The difference is that it uses the group_key parameter
-to map objects to particular servers.
-
-:func:`memcached_cas` is tested with the `MEMCACHED_BEHAVIOR_USE_UDP` behavior enabled. However, when using these operations with this behavior
-on, there are limits to the size of the payload being sent to the server. The
-reason for these limits is that the Memcached Server does not allow
-multi-datagram requests and the current server implementation sets a datagram
-size to 1400 bytes. Due to protocol overhead, the actual limit of the user
-supplied data is less than 1400 bytes and depends on the protocol in use as,
-well as the operation being executed. When running with the binary protocol,
-`MEMCACHED_BEHAVIOR_BINARY_PROTOCOL`, the size of the key,value,
-flags and expiry combined may not exceed 1368 bytes. When running with the
-ASCII protocol, the exact limit fluctuates depending on which function is
-being executed and whether the function is a cas operation or not. For
-non-cas ASCII set operations, there are at least 1335 bytes available to
-split among the key, key_prefix, and value; for cas ASCII operations there
-are at least 1318 bytes available to split among the key, key_prefix and value. If the total size of the command, including overhead, exceeds 1400 bytes, a `MEMCACHED_WRITE_FAILURE` will be returned.
-
-------
-RETURN
-------
-
-All methods return a value of type :type:`memcached_return_t`.
+`memcached_cas` overwrites data in the server as long as the ``cas`` value is
+still the same in the server. You can get the ``cas`` value of a result by
+calling `memcached_result_cas` on a `memcached_result_st` structure.
+
+`memcached_cas_by_key` method behaves in a similar way as the non key methods.
+The difference is that it uses the ``group_key`` parameter to map objects to
+particular servers.
+
+`memcached_cas` is tested with the `MEMCACHED_BEHAVIOR_USE_UDP` behavior
+enabled. However, when using these operations with this behavior on, there are
+limits to the size of the payload being sent to the server. The reason for
+these limits is that the Memcached Server does not allow multi-datagram requests
+and the current server implementation sets a datagram size to 1400 bytes. Due to
+protocol overhead, the actual limit of the user supplied data is less than 1400
+bytes and depends on the protocol in use as, well as the operation being
+executed. When running with the binary protocol,
+`MEMCACHED_BEHAVIOR_BINARY_PROTOCOL`, the size of the key,value, flags and
+expiry combined may not exceed 1368 bytes. When running with the ASCII protocol,
+the exact limit fluctuates depending on which function is being executed and
+whether the function is a cas operation or not. For non-cas ASCII set
+operations, there are at least 1335 bytes available to split among the key,
+key_prefix, and value; for cas ASCII operations there are at least 1318 bytes
+available to split among the key, key_prefix and value. If the total size of the
+command, including overhead, exceeds 1400 bytes, a `MEMCACHED_WRITE_FAILURE`
+will be returned.
+
+RETURN VALUE
+------------
+
+All methods return a value of type `memcached_return_t`.