Wow I'd be really surprised if cfhttp was quicker than cffile.
Oddly enough, sometimes it is, when used to fetch a file from the local
machine. I was very surprised by that myself, as it strikes me as
counterintuitive, to say the least.
Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
http://www.figleaf.com/
isn't always desirable.
-Original Message-
From: Dave Watts [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, October 13, 2003 8:32 AM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: RE: Storing XML
Wow I'd be really surprised if cfhttp was quicker than cffile.
Oddly enough, sometimes it is, when used to fetch a file from
Wow I'd be really surprised if cfhttp was quicker than cffile. Another
option though is cfinclude:
cfsavecontent variable=rawXmlcfinclude
template=myxml.xml/cfsavecontent
-Original Message-
From: Rich Z [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, 13 October 2003 3:54 p.m.
To: CF-Talk
Instead I want to store the data as XML in a text field. Pretty simple
right?
I format the data using cfwddx. This way I can easily format the data as
it
comes in and out of the database. It works great.
But now I ran into a problem. What if I want to search by model? Say I
want
all the
You may check some native XML database, like Tamino or Xindice but,
sincerely I never used them, only read something
You may start reading from here:
http://xml.apache.org/xindice/
Massimo
~|
Archives:
to. columnar format, with some keys and good
design in mind.
tony
-Original Message-
From: Kwang Suh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, August 20, 2003 10:30 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Re: storing xml in sql
1) Using wddx is, well, a really bad idea. How can you describe a
product
using
1) Using wddx is, well, a really bad idea. How can you
describe a product using wddx?
_VERY_ easily...
cfset product = structnew()
cfset product.productname = my product
cfset product.price = 20.00
cfset product.description = blah blah blah
cfwddx action=cfml2wddx input=#product# output=xml
On Wednesday 20 Aug 2003 22:27 pm, Alan Quinlan wrote:
Instead I want to store the data as XML in a text field. Pretty simple
right?
Use an XML database, or one that supports a native XML type, such as Oracle.
--
Tom Chiverton (sorry 'bout sig.)
Advanced ColdFusion Programmer
Tel: +44(0)1749
Im working on something with the best of both worlds i think. I
basically made a product_attributes table that links to the product
table. All the attribtues can go there. Its not what i originally
wanted to do, but im meeting myself in the middle here. hah
Hi Alan,
I would recommend this last
1) Using wddx is, well, a really bad idea. How can you describe a product
using wddx?
2) Storing XML in a text field is, well, a bad idea. Besides the obvious
performance implications, you're already running into problems with having
multiple pieces of data glommed into a big field.
Seems to
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