ColdFusion is definitely one of the easiest languages to learn.

After ColdFusion would be Ruby on Rails and PHP.

..NET, Java and JSP have very high learning curves. So does Adobe Flash.

The other way to go about things is to use a content management
system. As long as you don't need to modify the guts of the system,
then you don't need any programming at all. Drupal is an example of a
very popular CMS.

-Mike Chabot

On 9/12/07, John  Barrett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
> I have a question what is the easiest way for somebody with no programming 
> experience to work with dynamic web sites? I am telling my boss that it is 
> ColdFusion,and my agreement is if somebody knows html and maybe a little 
> javaScript then since ColdFusion is "tagged" based then it is the easiest 
> way. This was me a few years ago and I think that CF makes making dynamic web 
> apps possible for the newbie.
>
> I told him that there are other languages such as asp jsp php as well as 
> others, but with no programming experience to get data from a database and 
> display it to the web page is hard using these other languages, whereas this 
> is easy in ColdFusion.
>
> I would love to hear some other opinions on this. yes I am trying to convince 
> my boss to get a CF 8 server, but wants to make sure it is the best 
> investment in the long run.
>
> Thanks so much,
> John
>
>
> 

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