Mark,
You are absolutely right. Once I get a little more fluent with OO the
client will not be able to pay me enough to write crappy code.
~|
Create Web Applications With ColdFusion MX7 & Flex 2.
Build powerful, scalable RIAs. F
. (Assuming you want
the program to work and you still have that job.) Stick with it and
you'll get there.
Mark
-Original Message-
From: Aaron Roberson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2007 8:31 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Re: You think you know OOP.. but you d
@Dean
A "self-posting form" is a view page with a form on it that has the
action set to itself (or left blank, which is the same). The problem
with it is that 95% of the time people put business logic right into
the view page, hence they are not separating out the logic from the
view (separation o
On 3/23/07, Dean L wrote:
> back to the same form (controller)? Even if you are using a framework,
> your requests are typically routed back through a single page. Someone
> else had made a similar statement regarding self-posting forms and I'm
> just don't understand where that is coming from
On 3/23/07, Aaron Roberson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> ("just say NO" to self posting forms).
Aaron,
I'm a little confused. If you are using a controller to traffic your
requests to your different objects and methods, are you not posting
back to the same form (controller)? Even if you are using
> every other computer science major has learned OOP to some degree.
Yeah, and even us uneducated rubes get it eventually;)
Steve "Cutter" Blades
Adobe Certified Professional
Advanced Macromedia ColdFusion MX 7 Developer
_
http://blog.cutterscrossing.com
Jacob,
I agree that those who make frameworks should focus more on making
them more approachable. There is quite a debate regarding XML vs.
programmatic configurations and I lean on the side of programattic
configs because most XML configs introduce "vender" specific terms and
mark up that you hav
Hi Jonathan,
if it is two tier architecture, with out OOP knowledge u can build CFML web
sites .
if you want to seperate business logic from presentation layer and data
layer,u have to go for CFCs.
it is worth to follow OOP concepts ,it saves ur programmers
time(Inheritence) and gives security(abs
On Thursday 22 Mar 2007, Jonathan Block wrote:
> Why do so many articles get published in the CFMX world about OOP.
Because people are building large applications.
Because people want to build applications that can be understood.
Because people want applications that are not brittle when changed.
u *do* know OOP - what you're seeing is OOP PLUS the Java baggage PLUS
the performance workarounds. I.e. we're not in Kansas anymore.
Jaime
> -Original Message-
> From: Jonathan Block [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Friday, 23 March 2007 5:16 AM
> To: CF-Talk
> S
> Well, actually, this isn't entirely true. The idea of a "controller"
> predates MVC, and was commonly used in CGI programs written in procedural
> languages. For example, one of the first primitive web applications I wrote
> was in Visual Basic (!), and it was modelled after the example VB code
>
Very well put Richard. I would also add that I don't think the use of
"Buzz Words" here is fair. It connotes a sense of meaninglessness about
the words or phrases involved, and these OO terms have longs since left
the realm of buzz word, in my opinion.
"You'll have to drink from the Firehose un
On 3/22/07, Dave Watts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > i can't speak for model-glue as i've not done much more than
> > scratch the surface of it...but to suggest that the authors
> > of fusebox were trying to be "cool" by introducing new
> > terminology instead of using existing terminology is just
> i can't speak for model-glue as i've not done much more than
> scratch the surface of it...but to suggest that the authors
> of fusebox were trying to be "cool" by introducing new
> terminology instead of using existing terminology is just
> ridiculously silly since there was no "existing" te
> I agree with most of your post, Dave. But one thing that bothers me
> about the 100 CF frameworks out there is that often times these guys
> make up their own dialect instead of trying to use existing terms that
> mean the same thing. I'm not a frameworks expert, but from the
> reading I've don
On 3/22/07, Jacob Munson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > If you're trying to learn CFML, and don't know OOP, and haven't learned any
> > other languages, that can be tough. But these aren't just "crazy buzzwords",
> > they're useful descriptions for how to solve problems.
>
> I agree with most of yo
> > If you're trying to learn CFML, and don't know OOP, and haven't
> > learned any other languages, that can be tough. But these
> > aren't just "crazy buzzwords", they're useful descriptions
> > for how to solve problems.
>
> I agree with most of your post, Dave. But one thing that
> bother
> If you're trying to learn CFML, and don't know OOP, and haven't learned any
> other languages, that can be tough. But these aren't just "crazy buzzwords",
> they're useful descriptions for how to solve problems.
I agree with most of your post, Dave. But one thing that bothers me
about the 100 C
riginal Message-
From: Jonathan Block [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, March 22, 2007 1:16 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: You think you know OOP.. but you don't
Why do so many articles get published in the CFMX world about OOP.
I've read though several, not going to mention name
> Why do so many articles get published in the CFMX world about OOP.
Because OOP rocks. I would dispute your statement though; OOP is less
prevalent in CF than in other languages (from what I hear anyway).
> I feel like anybody who's trying to learn CFMX need not worry about
> whether
> or n
It's funny that you mention that, we've started a discussion about just
that on the Model-Glue list. Want to put together a good (and
usable/useful) sample application built upon some 'best practices'
concepts that is a) easy to understand, b) well documented, and c) can
be extended and attache
On 3/22/07, Jonathan Block <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Why do so many articles get published in the CFMX world about OOP.
>
> I've read though several, not going to mention names here... but you
> read it and it makes you think.. wow .. i thought I understood OOP but maybe
> I don't.
>
> Facto
> Why do so many articles get published in the CFMX world about
> OOP.
Because, for many CF programmers who don't know other languages, it's a new
(and potentially powerful) thing.
> I've read though several, not going to mention names
> here... but you read it and it makes you think.. wow
Why do so many articles get published in the CFMX world about OOP.
I've read though several, not going to mention names here... but you
read it and it makes you think.. wow .. i thought I understood OOP but maybe
I don't.
Factories... abstraction... models... patterns... that's too much crap
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