In the past, the US has held a near monopoly not only in ColdFusion-based user groups, but also conferences, with CFUnited, cf.Objective() and the more general Adobe MAX leading the way.
Tags: Adobe, Adobe ColdFusion, Adobe MAX, Aral Balkan, BlueDragon, Brighton, cf.Objective, CFUnited, ColdFusion, Coldspring, conference, Edinburgh, europe, Flex, Frameworks, Fusebox, Hal Helms, London, Mach-II, Microsoft, Model-Glue, Peter Bell, Peter Elst, Railo, Scotch on the Rocks, Sean Corfield, search engine, Silverlight, Simon Bailey, Spry, technology-agnostic topics, united kingdom, United States
With the introduction of ColdFusion MX, the ColdFusion community is maturing. Most CF developers have moved beyond spaghetti code and the mixing of business logic with presentation code. But it can be difficult and wasteful to “re-invent the wheel” for every application you write. Frameworks can help promote good development practices, standards, and a sound foundation for creating an application.
Tags: Adobe, Ben Edwards, Code, ColdFusion, ColdFusion application server, Coldspring, Frameworks, Fusebox, Hal Helms, Mach-II, Model-Glue, model-view-controller, New Brunswick, onTap, PHP, public services, Ruby on Rails, Tartan, TheHUB, web applications, web services, web-application framework, XML
Model-Glue is an Implicit Invocation framework simplifying use of the Model View Controller design pattern in ColdFusion applications. It’s designed to be easy to use and play well with others, like Tartan.
Tags: Alagad Inc., Code, ColdFusion, Controller, Doug Hughes, Frameworks, Joe Rinehart, Lightweight, model, Model and Controller, Model-Glue, Paul Kenney, Server Side, View