***************************** Team Allaire *****************************
OOO!! Bada-bing!!

-----Original Message-----
From: Fred T. Sanders [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, May 17, 2001 9:59 PM
To: Fusebox
Subject: Re: Choosing an architecture/methodology (RE: RIGID
STANDARDISATION I N EXTENDED FUSEBOX)


Considering the likelyhood that all he does is piece together, writings from
4 or 5 et al authors, how could he ?  :)

Fred

----- Original Message -----
From: "BORKMAN Lee" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Fusebox" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, May 17, 2001 9:37 PM
Subject: Choosing an architecture/methodology (RE: RIGID STANDARDISATION I N
EXTENDED FUSEBOX)


> Hey Nat,
>
> I don't even know if Ben himself would describe the code in his books as
> either an "architecture" or a "methodology".  It looks to me like he is
just
> giving examples about how particular low-level tags and techniques work.
>
> Of course, that was exactly how I started arranging my apps when I began
> with CF.  I knew how to make the tags work, but I didn't really have a
> notion of how to assemble a real-world application.  Then I looked into
> architectures and methodologies, and FuseBox was the obvious choice.
>
> To unravel your somewhat circular definition...
>
> To choose the most practical architecture/methodology:
> Choose the most widely-used practice that you consider sufficiently
> standardized, sufficiently flexible, and sufficiently simple.
>
> This probably disqualifies "stock-n-standard CF architecture", because is
it
> not sufficiently standardised.
>
> With luck, anyway, I am probably preaching to the converted on thius list
> ;-)
>
> Lee.
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Nat Papovich [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Friday, 18 May 2001 2:21
> To: Fusebox
> Subject: RE: RIGID STANDARDISATION IN EXTENDED FUSEBOX
>
>
> > build whatever application is needed, and that it is by far the
> > most popular
> > ColdFusion architecture around.  When the world changes to a different
>
> Sorry Lee, but stock-n-standard CF architecture learnt from the Forta
books
> and Allaire's Fast Track classes are THE most popular CF architecture
> around.
>
> How good an architecture is, combined with its popularity is what makes it
> "good".
>
> NAT
>
>
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