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 


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