On Fri, Dec 19, 2008 at 12:08 PM, s. isaac dealey wrote:
> It also depends upon your web server. The settings are primarily in the
> webserver config, so Apache and IIS handle it differently. There was
> something extra that needs to be done with an XML file in ColdFusion now
> that it's on J2
Ian,
You did shed a light. I appreciate it.
Thanks,
Ravi Gehlot
Ian Skinner wrote:
> Ravi Gehlot wrote:
>
>> Ian,
>>
>> Excellent explanation. You could not have been more clear. However,
>> can you provide me with instructions in how to accomplish this? So CF
>> will process the
> Ravi Gehlot wrote:
> > Ian,
> >
> > Excellent explanation. You could not have been more clear.
> However, > can you provide me with instructions in how to accomplish
> this? So CF > will process the request and spit HTML with a html
> extension? >
> > Thanks, Ravi.
>
> Sorry, not me personal
Ravi Gehlot wrote:
> Ian,
>
> Excellent explanation. You could not have been more clear. However,
> can you provide me with instructions in how to accomplish this? So CF
> will process the request and spit HTML with a html extension?
>
> Thanks, Ravi.
Sorry, not me personally. I have never
Ian,
Excellent explanation. You could not have been more clear. However,
can you provide me with instructions in how to accomplish this? So CF
will process the request and spit HTML with a html extension?
Thanks, Ravi.
Ian Skinner wrote:
> Ravi Gehlot wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>> I did
Claude Schneegans wrote:
> As you said earlier, it is always possible to have the client request
> for a .cfm file as a javascript file,
> then you have the same advantage and downside, but only when necessary.
That is true, and the way I would normally do it. But I will point out
something I r
>>The benefit is that you could have linked
JavaScript files dynamically built with CFML. The downside is that it
interferes with normal browser caching of linked script and|or style
files,
Exact. This is why it is not advisable to pass systematically ALL js
files to CF.
As you said earlier, it
Ravi Gehlot wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I didn't follow this thread closely. But I am curious as to what you
> guys were discussing. How would I customize my webserver settings so
> that .js files are parsed by CF and why would I want to do that? I know
> that JS files are only text files and as far
Hello,
I didn't follow this thread closely. But I am curious as to what you
guys were discussing. How would I customize my webserver settings so
that .js files are parsed by CF and why would I want to do that? I know
that JS files are only text files and as far as I know there aren't any
s
> You cannot do it if you have the script in a .js file.
>> Not with a default install... You can do that however if you customize
your webserver settings so that .js files are parsed by CF.
That's interesting. I didn't know that, but I'm still not sure I'd want to
do that. Seems like there mig
Thanks for the info, guys!
Rick
> -Original Message-
> From: Ian Skinner [mailto:h...@ilsweb.com]
> Sent: Wednesday, December 17, 2008 5:27 PM
> To: cf-talk
> Subject: Re: IT IS TOTALLY possible to skip js with cfif
>
> s. isaac dealey wrote:
> > Not with a de
s. isaac dealey wrote:
> Not with a default install... You can do that however if you customize
> your webserver settings so that .js files are parsed by CF. For a long
> time I'd considered creating my own site using .ike files. I never have
> though. ;)
You are also not required to name your li
> It is 100% possible to skip java script code using CF conditioning. I
> use CF conditioning in JS code all the time. I change variable names,
> feed variable values to JS, turn functions on and off, etc.
>
> To do this you have to run the JS code in-line so it's parsed through
> the CF interpre
It is 100% possible to skip java script code using CF conditioning. I use CF
conditioning in JS code all the time. I change variable names, feed variable
values to JS, turn functions on and off, etc.
To do this you have to run the JS code in-line so it's parsed through the CF
interpreter. You can
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