I have been working with it since it basically came out in the 90s.  I do
some OO and some procedural, it really depends on who I am doing work for.
 For example some of the places I do work for have their own inhouse
frameworks and methodologies which are not OO but that is what you use when
you do work for them.  Then at the same time I might be doing an all OO
based application for some other client because either they requested it or
they did not specify and I just wanted to do it that way.  When I look at
people with 10+ years of experience I think beyond what their CF skills are,
I think of where their SQL skills should be amongst other things like JS and
so on but SQL probably is the bigger one for me.

On Thu, Nov 6, 2008 at 2:03 PM, CF Developer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:

> I hope neither of you are making that a stereotype. I have 10 years as a CF
> developer, and EVERYTHING I do is OO, and I have a fundamental understanding
> of it, and use the usual OO frameworks like Mach-ii, ColdSpring, and
> Transfer (although I have developed OO apps without a front controller,
> too), and even built my own (closed, sorry) framework to solve specialized
> problems that the standard frameworks didn't. I have architected
> high-traffic, high-volume and high-revenue enterprise applications. Would
> you see 10 years on my resume and throw it out? I hope not.
>
> I didn't post this looking for work, as I have a fulltime job (parttime
> freelance OK). I just wanted to respond to this thread.
>
> 

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