- Home
- Rob
- Pere
- Foo(d) Bar Blog
- Contact
If you're running ColdFusion MX 7.0.2, you may be interested to know that the latest cumulative hot fix has been released. You can download the file from Adobe's website.
The hot fix fixes a number of bugs including several with cfchart, cfreport, and sandbox security. As always, Adobe only recommends applying the hot fix if you are experiencing problems caused by any of the fixed issues.
This may already be obvious to heavy Eclipse/CFEclipse/FlexBuilder users, but there's a really simple way to move one or more lines of code around without having to use copy/paste.
To move a single line of code, place the cursor anywhere on the line and click alt-up arrow to move the code up one line, or alt-down arrow to move the code down one line.
To move multiple lines of code at once, highlight the code you wish to move and use the same alt-up arrow/alt-down arrow shortcut. It's that easy!
Paul Kenney is working on the next major release of his unit testing framework for ColdFusion, CFCUnit and is interested in hearing what you want to see in the release.
The moment you've all been anxiously awaiting... Adobe has finally announced the dates and locations for MAX 2007:
It looks like this year's MAX will cover the entire Adobe product range, which should make for an absolutely huge event. Couple that with the release of Scorpio (ColdFusion 8) sometime this year, and I think you have the makings of a great conference.
There currently isn't any information available on the Adobe website, but you should expect some soon.
I hope to see many of you in Chicago this year!
Check out Many Eyes, a new social data visualization application over at IBM alphaWorks
This isn't a Flex app (it's Java), but it easily could be.
Essentially, Many Eyes allows you to upload data sets via your web browser and share visualizations of the data with others - in the hopes of starting conversations around the data. It's a pretty cool concept all-around.
The system supports several visualization types including geographic maps, line and stack graphs, bar and bubble charts, histograms, scatter plots, network diagrams, tree maps, pie charts, and more.
I bet doing this in Java was a real pain. Given that IBM used to be a Flex partner (but now seems to be more interested in AJAX), I wonder why they chose an applet over Flex.
Please pardon any interruptions to the site over the next day or so as I transfer registration of the site from Register.com to GoDaddy... This update may affect teh cfczone.org and cfcdev mailing lists as well.