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/

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