Andrew Powell

Into The Mind of A Solutions Architect

Andrew Powell

Enterprise MVC With ColdFusion and Java

May 3, 2008 · 10 Comments

Here is the code/slides for my cf.Objective 2008 presentation: "Enterprise MVC With ColdFusion and Java".  If you are currently sitting in my session, feel free to download the code and follow along.  If you're not in my session right now, still download the code and follow along.

 

Download The Code From My Google Code Site

 

P.S.  Don't forget to come to my BOF tonight on creating & using Open-Source Projects. 

Tags: Adobe · ColdFusion · Conferences · General · Hibernate · Java · JSP · Mach-II · Speaking · Spring · Spry · Universal Mind · XML

10 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Busby SEO Test Pinay // Jan 5, 2009 at 5:05 AM

    thanks for the link
  • 2 Busby SEO Test Pinay // Jan 5, 2009 at 5:06 AM

    thanks for the link i had a good time here
  • 3 Adam Reid // Feb 9, 2009 at 10:04 AM

    Hi Andy,<br /><br />Did you progress with this? I was thinking about creating a CF/Java MVC framework. I have run a couple of projects with a Java back-end and CF front-end and feel it could be done better.<br /><br />I would be interested to hear if you made any progress with this? Is there a project underway already?<br /><br />Rgds, Adam
  • 4 Andrew Powell // Feb 9, 2009 at 12:23 PM

    @Adam I actually scrapped this approach in favor of an all Java approach. In fact, I've summed up my thoughts here: http://www.infoaccelerator.net/blog/post.cfm/what-am-i-using-coldfusion-for-these-days
  • 5 learning selling // Feb 24, 2009 at 1:01 AM

    thank you for this!
  • 6 Adam Reid // Feb 24, 2009 at 3:09 AM

    Interesting comments on the subject. <br /><br />One point I would add is speed of development in CF. I've been developing J2EE apps for several years and not once managed to build something as quick as I could have done in CF. I believe sometimes, people ask for &quot;J2EE solutions&quot; when they dont actually need one. A few cfc's thrown together will often do the job in half the time. <br /><br />However, the problem I have had, is some of the busines logic and processing has had to be done in real-time and CF just doesnt have this capability, along with others.<br /><br />I think your right actually, stick to what CF does best. <br /><br />Cheers, Adam
  • 7 Adnan // May 6, 2009 at 10:30 AM

    Hello,<br /><br />I have been developing j2ee application for more than 3 years but from last 4/5 months i am working on ColdFusion. This blog catches my attention as i am in a task to integrate these 2(CF and J2EE) in of our projects. Since i don't have much knowledge in CF, i need your assistance of making your project runnable. <br />what are the approaches to run this project? any guidelines for it?<br />Another question, since you have used this combination(CF and J2EE) with ColdFusion8 server, i was wondering of Raiolo's purpose? <br />Any comments/please?
  • 8 Adnan // May 8, 2009 at 1:50 AM

    Hello<br /><br />Anybody of you have deployed and run this application? well actually i want to run and exactly wanna see the both applications running...<br />Looking forward to your comments
  • 9 Adnan // May 12, 2009 at 5:59 AM

    Finally i have successfully run this sample application. Deployed on Coldfusion8.
  • 10 dinoYT // May 15, 2009 at 1:54 AM

    Adobe needs to do something to their licensing structure. Right now its very hard to use on Amazon EC2 and other scalable datacenters. You can use Amazon EC2 http://file.sh/Amazon+EC2+torrent.html to quickly scale from 1 to 10 (for example) servers when you get a sudden rush of traffic, but how do you handle the CF licenses? Right now you’d have to buy 10 licenses and let 9 of them be wasted most of the time.

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