WordPress is a great blog engine. I don't have exact statistics in front of me, but I would wager that WordPress is one of the most prolific blog engines on the net. I myself have set up several sites over the years for family, friends, and such using it. Its quick and easy, there's a gabillion themes to pick from, more than a lot of plugins (I would say a "plethora" of plugins) available,
Entries for month: June 2009
My "Friendly Linkage" list to the right always displays alphabetically sorted, and while I do have a natural affinity for order and organization, I would like to mix it up a bit instead of always showing everyone I share links to listed in the same order (I know I know its the egalitarian in me really).
I like CFCs. I enjoy building and using them. I like encapsulating my business logic within them, and extending and reusing them wherever I can. They are typically the brains in any project I architect. However, one thing has always bothered me about their implementation:
So I was randomly curious about ColdFusion's implementation of reserved words, specifically true and false. I wondered, "Can true be set to false in ColdFusion?" You may ask "Why would you ever want to do this?" I might respond "No frakking idea."
On Tuesday, June 9th, Sean Corfield will be presenting at the Sacramento Area ColdFusion Users Group here in Roseville. His topic of choice will be Railo, a fairly robust competitor to Adobe's ColdFusion. As most probably know, Sean is an established leader in the ColdFusion community and has recently joined the Railo team as CTO, so this should prove to be an interesting occasion on both fronts. Check out saccfug.com for more details and location.
I'm Matt Hill, a Sacramento area application developer working with CF for close to a decade, and this is my personal blog.
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