If you really needed to use an invoker from within CFSCRIPT, it may not be a bad idea to wrap your cfinvoke call in a UDF or method... then call myInvokerMethod(object,method) from within your CFSCRIPT-style code.
I did this in a previous project with several tags that have no CFSCRIPT-style counterparts. Works great as well... Laterz! v On Tue, 15 Mar 2005 15:10:54 -0800, Sean Corfield <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Tue, 15 Mar 2005 17:17:08 -0500, Dave Merrill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Adam, I hate to sound more OO-gnorant that I already have, but why is > > cfinvoke so evil? Is it cfexecute-like internally? > > It's pure style. <cfinvoke> behaves just like the script-like method > call under the covers. > > Heck, the Mach II invokers use <cfinvoke> specifically because they > are calling methods dynamically! > -- > Sean A Corfield -- http://www.corfield.org/ > Team Fusebox -- http://www.fusebox.org/ > Got Gmail? -- I have 50, yes 50, invites to give away! > > "If you're not annoying somebody, you're not really alive." > -- Margaret Atwood -- Continuum Media Group LLC Burnsville, MN 55337 http://www.web-relevant.com http://cfobjective.neo.servequake.com ---------------------------------------------------------- You are subscribed to cfcdev. To unsubscribe, send an email to [email protected] with the words 'unsubscribe cfcdev' as the subject of the email. CFCDev is run by CFCZone (www.cfczone.org) and supported by CFXHosting (www.cfxhosting.com). An archive of the CFCDev list is available at www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]
