Book Image

Railo 3 Beginner's Guide

By : Mark Drew , Gert Franz, Paul Klinkenberg, Jordan Michaels
Book Image

Railo 3 Beginner's Guide

By: Mark Drew , Gert Franz, Paul Klinkenberg, Jordan Michaels

Overview of this book

<p>Railo Server is one of the quickest ways to start developing complex web applications online. Widely considered as the fastest CFML (ColdFusion Markup Language) engine, Railo allows you to create dynamic web pages that can change depending on user input, database lookups, or even the time of day.</p> <p>Railo 3 Beginner's Guide will show you how to get up and running with Railo, as well as developing your web applications with the greatest of ease. You will learn how to install Railo and the basics of CFML to allow you to gradually build up your knowledge, and your dynamic web applications, as the book progresses.</p> <p>Using Packt’s Beginner's Guide approach, this book will guide you, with step-by-step instructions, through installing the Railo Server on various environments. You will learn how to use caches, resources, Event Gateways and special scripting functions that will allow you to create webpages with limitless functionality. You will even explore methods of extending Railo by adding your own tags to the server and building custom extensions. Railo 3 Beginner's Guide is a must for anyone getting to grips with Railo Server.</p>
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Railo 3
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Time for action - using the <cfloop> tag in CFScript


  1. 1. Let's start off by copying the original list loop that we looked at earlier into a new file named loopscript.cfm under the <Railo Install Directory>/webroot/Chapter_6/ directory:

    <cfset myList = "Item One, Item Two, Item Three">
    <cfloop list="#myList#" index="l">
    <cfoutput>#l#<br></cfoutput>
    </cfloop>
    
  2. 2. Now, if we head to http://localhost:8888/Chapter_6/loopscript.cfm, we should get the list output as follows:

    Item One
    Item Two
    Item Three
    
  3. 3. Let's change the code to just use CFScript. We will use the <cfloop> tag, but now use angular brackets to wrap the content; in other words, we use what's inside the <cfloop> tag:

    <cfscript>
    myList = "Item One, Item Two, Item Three";
    loop list="#myList#" index="l" {
    WriteOutput( l & "<br>");
    }
    </cfscript>
    
  4. 4. Running this code, we now get exactly the same output!

    Item One
    Item Two
    Item Three
    

What just happened?

Wow!...