What do you meanby it does not work, is there an error, the file is not
included, what?
Regards
Russ Michaels
>From my mobile
On 1 Mar 2012 21:16, "Eileen Harberts" wrote:
>
> I am trying to code a cfinclude on a template page:
>
>
>
> to show this include when its pages are displayed. The na
Are you sure you need the ".." in front of the first slash? It could be a
relative path issue. What errors are you getting?
Best regards,
Bill Franklin
-Original Message-
From: Eileen Harberts [mailto:eil...@tdai.net]
Sent: Thursday, March 01, 2012 3:16 PM
To: cf-talk
Subject: CFi
I am trying to code a cfinclude on a template page:
to show this include when its pages are displayed. The name of the include is
correct, the location it is directing to is correct, but it will not work.
Does someone have an easy solution to help me?
~~
I don't want to sound stupid but how does regex work? I could use something
similar to this and always fall flat on my face every time someone mentions
regex
Ken Hammond
IT Director
The Salem Group
Phone: 630-873-3018
Fax: 630-932-7010
Email: khamm...@saleminc.com
www.saleminc.com
On F
I have certainly seen my fair share of bad comments.
commented out comments.
blocks of code which have been commented out and disabled but the comments
are still there for that disabled code and have not been updated.
comments for code which no longer exists.
but it all comes down to the same thi
Mike, some arguments are comments are:
1) Repeats what's already obvious. For example:
2) Easy to become outdated.
For example, a comment that says something like, "This hunts for bears
using a shotgun" whereas the code was modified to hunt for bears using
blunt toothpicks. Maybe another deve
First to the original poster, there is a way to do this but I would be
asking why you would want to first. With comments being used for annotated
validation for hyrule, to annotated comments for ORM. If it is just to
purely find code that has been commented out, and needs removing then a
search a
I will add my 2p that uncommented code drives me nuts.
when you have to work on an app you have never seen before the lack of any
useful comments usually results in it taking many x longer to figure stuff
out and get up and running with the app.
If you have a load a load of documentation and tests
I dont understand what's the problem with comments anyway.So what if we
have comments peppered through the code?Do they slow down processing in
any significant way?Yes, they cause the files to be somewhat larger,
but if all that means is a bit more disk space gets used, so what?If
> > You: Don't use comments, use tests.
> > Cutter, me: Comments can help those who come to the source code later
> > in ways that tests may not.
> > You: That's why we pair program.
> > Michael: What if all the developers who worked on the project are long
> > gone?
> > You: Read the tests.
>
> T
That's misrepresenting the thread. This is more accurate:
Me: Don't use comments, use tests.
Cutter: Noobs can't read tests
Me: That's why we pair program.
Michael: What do *you* do if all the developers who worked on the project
are long gone?
You: Read the tests. (implication; I'm not a noob).
> > So what do you do ten years later when nobody on the team was there when
> > the code was written?
>
> Read the tests.
Wait a sec. Here's a summary of what's been posted.
You: Don't use comments, use tests.
Cutter, me: Comments can help those who come to the source code later
in ways that te
> > I just don't see why that's the hill you want to die on.
>
> I don't see why you care...
Presumably for the same reason you cared enough to post in the first place?
Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
http://www.figleaf.com/
http://training.figleaf.com/
Fig Leaf Software is a Veteran-Owned
Read the tests.
--
Shu Ha Ri: Agile and .NET blog
http://www.bifrost.com.au/
On 1 March 2012 22:33, Michael Stemle wrote:
>
> So what do you do ten years later when nobody on the team was there when
> the code was written?
>
>
I don't see why you care...
--
Shu Ha Ri: Agile and .NET blog
http://www.bifrost.com.au/
On 1 March 2012 22:30, Dave Watts wrote:
> I just don't see why that's the hill you
> want to die on.
~|
Order the Adobe Coldfusion A
So what do you do ten years later when nobody on the team was there when the
code was written?
--
~ Mike Stemle, Jr.
On Feb 29, 2012, at 18:25, James Holmes wrote:
>
> This is why we pair program. Eventually everyone on the team has seen each
> bit of code in the app (or at least most of it)
> This is why we pair program. Eventually everyone on the team has seen each
> bit of code in the app (or at least most of it) and when new people come
> along they get to sit with someone who knows the app well and can reinforce
> the design expressed in the tests. Regardless of skill level they
This is why we pair program. Eventually everyone on the team has seen each
bit of code in the app (or at least most of it) and when new people come
along they get to sit with someone who knows the app well and can reinforce
the design expressed in the tests. Regardless of skill level they can then
Our community has already tested it :)
http://robertdudley.wordpress.com/2010/05/07/upgrade-java-poi-for-better-excel-support-in-coldfusion-8/
Guess it's going to be safe, will report if I face any issues.
Thx & rgds,
Pradeep Viswanathan R
-Original Message-
From: Leigh [mailto:cfs
If you need a tool that "understands" tags, the jericho html parser is
probably a good bet. It won't get script comments though.
:den
--
I don't think nationalism is alone holding the field; it's in contention
with a lot of different things.
Peter Singer
~~
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