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Enterprise Class MVC with ColdFusion and Java

By: Sean Corfield
Tuesday, April 1st, 2008
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*Enterprise Class MVC with ColdFusion and Java is one of the sessions at the cf.Objective() 2008 Conference.

We hear a lot of talk about using individual Java objects within ColdFusion but the reality of enterprise development is that entire subsystems tend to built entirely in Java.

Software teams that serve the enterprise often build large, complex systems using Spring and Hibernate. How do you go about using ColdFusion with such systems?

I haven’t seen any presentations on this subject so I was pleasantly surprised when I started reviewing Andrew Powell’s slide deck to find that he was focusing on how ColdFusion can provide the web front end to enterprise class Java systems.

He introduces Spring (the Java version) with a demo and then introduces Hibernate (the industry standard ORM for Java), again with a demo.

After that, he will walk you through solutions to the problem of connecting ColdFusion on the front end to Spring on the backend and, using Mach-II as an example, he then shows how to create an MVC web application that allows you to leverage the entire Spring-powered, Hibernate-persisted Java backend.

If you work along a Java team – or you are considering using more Java for your backend systems – this talk will provide you with a lot of good information about how well ColdFusion plays in this space.

Andrew Powell – Enterprise Class MVC with ColdFusion and Java – Saturday 11:25am

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About the Author:
Sean is currently Chief Technology Officer for Railo Technologies US. He has worked in IT for over twenty five years, starting out writing database systems and compilers then moving into mobile telecoms and finally into web development in 1997. Along the way, he worked on the ISO and ANSI C++ Standards committees for eight years and is a staunch advocate of software standards and best practice. Sean has championed and contributed to a number of CFML frameworks and was lead developer on Fusebox for two years.
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