Dave Merrill wrote:
Dave and Sam, First, I wanted to point out that my forte is not technical writing and I apologize if my previous response was unintelligible and imprecise. I debated if I should send post this since it appears that we are at different ends of the spectrum. However, here goes as food for thought... At certain points, I believe that it is necessary to have some sort of concrete implementation. In this case, I feel it would be easier to work with something that is concrete and not abstract. IMO, it wastes time "resolving arguments" before it actually commences what it is supposed to do: create(), read(), update() or delete(). Although negligible under little or no load, it "could" amount to a chunk of processing cycles on an application under heavy load that I would rather see devoted to other things - such as faster thread processing or a higher throughput. However, two implementations of a generic DAO could be so vastly different - due to CFC statefulness, introspection, caching of DAOs in a persistent scope and personal coding style - results may vary. I am curious if Sam has any thoughts about on application load and how his introspective generic DAO scales for larger applications. In the end, it's six of one or half-a-dozen of another...and a matter of personal taste. Happy Mother's Day to all celebrating with their families. Merci et bon journee, .Peter -- Peter J. Farrell :: Maestro Publishing blog :: http://blog.maestropublishing.com email :: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Create boilerplate beans! Check out the Mach-II Bean Creator - free download. http://blog.maestropublishing.com/mach-ii_beaner.htm Achievement: You can do anything you set your mind to when you have vision, determination, and an endless supply of expendable labor. ------------------------------------------------------------ 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). CFCDev is supported by New Atlanta, makers of BlueDragon http://www.newatlanta.com/products/bluedragon/index.cfm An archive of the CFCDev list is available at www.mail-archive.com/[email protected] |
