Yeah, pretty much. In the main app I'm in charge of, most of our requests will end up calling at least 20-30 methods on the public facing side, and the admin side probably averages around 100-120 per request, with some calling significantly more than that. Some of that requires instantiation (we haven't implemented pooling for our BOs, because there hasn't been a need), but most of them are calls to application-scoped CFCs.
FarCry is another example of a massively CFC-driven app that's open source, so you can actually see what's going on behind it. cheers, barneyb On 8/22/05, John Farrar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Jacob, > > I believe that is what Barney meant. The biggest time hit is processing the > CFC and getting and instance "instantiated". After it is instantiated (if > you cache it in "scope" then it's not going to be much more than just > execution speed... which should be quite fast. (Barney isn't that what you > meant?) > > John > -- Barney Boisvert [EMAIL PROTECTED] 360.319.6145 http://www.barneyb.com/ Got Gmail? I have 50 invites. ---------------------------------------------------------- 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]
