Not really. You could build a Mach-II application that has one listener and just jam hundreds of methods into it...which is certainly not OO. OO is an idea that is really independent from a framework, whether it is Fusebox or Mach-II or Model-Glue. In other words, just because you are using CFCs doesn't mean you are learning OO. My advice would be to grab some books on OO, play with Java, and build up your own tests that try out various OO concepts using CFCs. I have a CFC-based bookstore application that uses Fusebox 4.1 and an OO model available at my site, http://www.briankotek.com/blog, which you might find helpful. It's in the sidebar.

Regards,

Brian

On 7/12/05, Stephen Adams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Is Mach_ii the closest form of ColdFusion to Object-Orientated? What I mean is if you learn and build an application using Mach-ii then you app will be more OO and you will learn more about OO for CF?

On 7/12/05, Phil Cruz < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
check the example application on http://mach-ii.info
 
-Phil

 
On 7/12/05, Stephen Adams < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi everyone,

When I'm trying to move to a more OOP style of building CF applications, I always find that when it comes to building sections like a login section or a message recording form, I can't relate OO to it. When I read examples in both Java and CF they are always cars, people or animals. I find it hard to turn the idea of having properties and methods to a login screen. Then I find I fall back into procedural programming.

How do those who do use OOP create login screens or forms?

Stephen
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