CFScript is an extension of CFML on the ColdFusion platform. CFScript resembles JavaScript. Some ColdFusion developers prefer it since it has less visual and typographical overhead than ordinary CFML.
Video CFScript
Usage
It is considered best practice to write ColdFusion Components and all business logic in CFScript and to use CFML only in .cfm files amongst HTML.
All CFScript code must be contained within a CFScript tag pair as follows, unless it's within a pure script-based ColdFusion Component.
A simple example of a function:
A simple example of a component in CFScript, containing two functions:
ColdFusion 11, Railo 4.1+ and Lucee 4.5+ both do their best to fully support cf tags in CFScript. While there may not be direct substitutions for all tags, it is often still possible to achieve the results of a tag in script, but via a different syntax. For example, this is how to get a query into a variable in CFSCRIPT without writing a UDF:
Maps CFScript
Syntax
Since ColdFusion 8, CFScript has supported syntax abbreviations that are common in many other programming languages, such as "++", "<=" and "+=".
Arithmetic operators
Comments
CFScript has two forms of comments: single line and multiline.
Try / Catch
Switch statement
Looping
For Loop
FOR IN Loop
While Loop
Do / While Loop
Looping over an Array
Differences from JavaScript
Although CFScript and JavaScript are similar, they have several key differences. The following list identifies CFScript features that differ from JavaScript:
- CFScript uses ColdFusion expressions, which are not a superset or a subset of JavaScript expressions. In particular, ColdFusion expressions do not support bitwise operators, and the ColdFusion MOD or % operator operates differently from the corresponding JavaScript % operator: In ColdFusion, the operator does integer arithmetic and ignores fractional parts. ColdFusion expressions also support the EQV, IMP, CONTAINS, and DOES NOT CONTAIN operators that are not supported in JavaScript.
- Variable declarations (var keyword) are only used in user-defined functions and threads.
- CFScript is not case sensitive.
- All statements end with a semicolon, and line breaks in the code are ignored.
- Assignments are statements, not expressions, and therefore cannot be used in situations that require evaluating the assignment operation.
- JavaScript objects, such as
window
anddocument
, are not available. - Only the ColdFusion server processes CFScript. There is no client-side CFScript.
References
External links
- Extending ColdFusion Pages with CFML Scripting - Adobe
Source of the article : Wikipedia