How Does It Feel To Be An Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer?

Posted August 24, 2006 at 1:24 PM

Tags: ColdFusion, Work

Pretty freakin' sweet, I tell you what! I just got certified this morning and passed with a 95%. It was so stressful getting ready, I mean, I haven't taken a test in like 5 years (except for my Personal Training certification and that was a joke). I'll tell you though, the studying really forces you to look at stuff you rarely ever use. I hope to continue to grow as a ColdFusion developer and all that stuff...

But enough of that, what celebration would be complete with out a little celebratory cleavage???


 
 
 

 
Celebrator Cleavage : Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer  
 
 
 

Congratulations to me :)

Post Comment  |  Ask Ben  |  Permalink  |  Other Searches  |  Print Page




Learning ColdFusion 9 - ColdFusion 9 tutorials, samples, examples, demos

Reader Comments

Aug 24, 2006 at 4:22 PM // reply »
2 Comments

congrats. Any study tips?


Aug 24, 2006 at 4:29 PM // reply »
74 Comments

Josh,

To prepare for the exam I read Ben Forta's exam guide and I also got the practice software from CentraSoft [ http://www.centrasoft.com/ ]. I would say BOTH were absolutely essential. Forta's book gives you a great overview of the language with sample questions... but the exam prep software was fantastic. I haven't taken a test in a long time and this really gets you ready for taking the test. If you are going for the certification I would say definitely get BOTH. Neither are much more than like 40 bucks and well worth it.


Aug 24, 2006 at 4:55 PM // reply »
2 Comments

Thanks for the tips. I'm glad to know I'm on the right track. I'd already purchased Ben Forta's book, and was just about to get the CentraSoft software.


Aug 24, 2006 at 5:10 PM // reply »
74 Comments

Josh,

Most definately the way to go. It really helps you prepare for the way they ask questions in a way that nothing else in my studying did. It really shows you how *prepared* you have to be and what areas you need to know as well and really highlighting what areas you do not know.


Nov 7, 2007 at 11:52 AM // reply »
1 Comments

Che bumbe quella nera!!


Post Comment  |  Ask Ben

Recent Blog Comments
Nov 21, 2009 at 1:13 PM
My First ColdFusion Builder Extension - Encrypting And Decrypting CFM / CFC Files
@Ben, Because I am pedantic, I just want to make sure that everyone knows there is absolutely no encryption going on. There is only encoding and obfuscation. The cfencode tool only obfuscates your C ... read »
Nov 21, 2009 at 12:28 PM
Using ColdFusion Structures To Remove Duplicate List Values
@Jody I can't seem to get your code sample to work. If you are still having problems, try this code out and see if it gets you what you wanted. <!--- Comma delimited list with various duplicates ... read »
Nov 21, 2009 at 11:03 AM
Groovy Operator Overloading Does Not Work In The ColdFusion Context
Hi Ben, Thanks for this informative post. Now I am reading ur old posts too ... read »
Nov 21, 2009 at 10:56 AM
HostMySite.com Has The Best ColdFusion Hosting
@Mehul, Yes very nice people, however several downtimes per day which was not acceptable. Hence we had to move out. I am glad you are having good luck with them so far. ... read »
Nov 20, 2009 at 11:32 PM
Five Months Without Hungarian Notation And I'm Loving It
I've used headless camel case for years for not only ColdFusion variables, but also SQL tables and fields... pretty much everything involving code. I also subscribe to the "don't abbreviate and clea ... read »
Nov 20, 2009 at 11:00 PM
Five Months Without Hungarian Notation And I'm Loving It
@Marcel, Yeah, I always err on the side of longer but more readable variable names. As for the camel casing of CF methods and the headless camel casing of custom items, I get around this by always ... read »
Nov 20, 2009 at 10:56 PM
Five Months Without Hungarian Notation And I'm Loving It
I use the following and love it: my.namespace.MyComponents.functionMethodsOrUDF() CONSTANT_VALUES_OR_PROPERTIES One thing I always try is to CamelCaseBuiltInColdFusionFunctions() so others can tell ... read »