when I had to produce documentation for a content management system
that I inherited that had no documentation. It didn't handle CFCs (a
CF 5 environment), but it could with minor adjustments. It did a lot
of it automatically. I can see if I can find the code. It ran with
an Access DB (was just running on my local machine).
On Thu, 15 Jul 2004 16:26:45 -0700, Spike <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> This is relatively easy to write in ColdFusion, but it wouldn't necessarily
> be the fastest thing on earth.
>
> It really depends on what exactly you want to find in the code and what you
> want to do with the results.
>
> If you're not too fussy you can use the default Microsoft search on windows
> to find stuff in files with a specific extension.
>
> If you are fussy then chances are that the simplest solution would be to use
> a recursive cfdirectory call, loop over the results, then load and search
> the contents of each file for a specific set of strings such as cfinclude,
> cfinvoke, createObject('component' etc.
>
> Or did I misunderstand what you were asking?
>
> Spike
>
> --------------------------------------------
> Stephen Milligan
> Code poet for hire
> http://www.spike.org.uk
>
> Do you cfeclipse? http://cfeclipse.tigris.org
>
>
> >-----Original Message-----
> >From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Michael Dinowitz
> >Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004 3:02 PM
> >To: CF-Talk
> >Subject: Code mapping software?
> >
> >I'm trying to trace down the includes and CFCs in a large, complex
> >site written by a few different programmers. Is there any software out
> >there that can be pointed to a directory and will map out what
> >includes are used where, what CFCs are called where, etc?
> >If not, does anyone want to write one? ;)
> >--
> >Michael Dinowitz
> >http://www.houseoffusion.com
> >For all your ColdFusion needs
> >
> >
>
>
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