Yes and no. To me it is kind of a surface level comparison which doesn't do anyone any good.
For example the Data Manipulation in CF can be done either implicitly or directly (myquery.fieldname[rec]). Also the extendibility comparison seems to focus on COM objects, which was fine in CF <= 5.0 but nowadays CFMX can be extended using Java, not to mention CFC's. The database speed comparison is BS, mainly because the details of the database setup, querys used, machine speed are not detailed. Maybe he was clueless and didn't know he was developing .NET on a speedy resource rich server, but the CF code was on a dog of machine. Who knows? Oh well, I'm not trying to stick up for CF, but I wouldn't use that page to decide between the two. /rant John > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Mark Ireland > Sent: Tuesday, October 18, 2005 6:46 PM > To: [email protected] > Subject: [CFCDev] J.H on CF > > > I was sent this link by Jeff Houser: > > http://www.instantcoldfusion.com/resources/CFMXASP.cfm > > I dont know much about asp.net but. . . . .Is any of this correct? > > Data manipulation: ASP: direct, through ADO objects; CF: > implicit, through > tag usage > Comment: .NET is much more powerful and flexibile; but it > will take a while > to get up to speed. > > > Mass database Insert or Updates: ASP: Can be done Through the > use of Dataset > and Oledbcommand; CF: Use CFInsert or cfquery in a loop. > Comment: I'm not sure of the specific implementation of > either of these, > however in .NET I could write code to grab thousands of > records from one > database, transform the data, and insert them into another > database. The > code ran in minutes. Similar code I've written in ColdFusion > would take > hours. > > _________________________________________________________________ > SEEK: Over 80,000 jobs across all industries at Australia's > #1 job site. > http://ninemsn.seek.com.au?hotmail > > > > ---------------------------------------------------------- > 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] > > ---------------------------------------------------------- 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]
