But following a good methodology you can make a CF project an ideal. That was the point of this topic. It doesn't force good practices, it allows us to make the choice.

There is a saying: the perfect is the enemy of the good. That applies here,
clearly. Programming projects need to be built with that in mind. Why would
you use a programming language like CF at all if you truly want "pursuit of
the ideal"? That's not what it's designed for. CF is a loosely-typed
procedural language with a way to write some OO code. CF allows you to do
all sorts of stupid things. It doesn't force separation of logic and
presentation, or even give you a gentle kick in that direction. In an ideal
world, no one would use it! We'd all be using Java or C#, I guess.
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