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Ben Nadel at cf.Objective() 2010 (Minneapolis, MN) with: Doug Hughes and Ezra Parker and Dan Wilson and John Mason and Jason Dean and Luis Majano and Mark Mandel and Brian Kotek and Wil Genovese and Rob Brooks-Bilson and Andy Matthews and Simeon Bateman and Ray Camden and Chris Rockett and Joe Bernard and Dan Skaggs and Byron Raines and Barney Boisvert and Simon Free and Steve 'Cutter' Blades and Seth Bienek and Katie Bienek and Jeff Coughlin
Ben Nadel at cf.Objective() 2010 (Minneapolis, MN) with: Doug Hughes Ezra Parker Dan Wilson John Mason Jason Dean Luis Majano Mark Mandel Brian Kotek Wil Genovese Rob Brooks-Bilson Andy Matthews Simeon Bateman Ray Camden Chris Rockett Joe Bernard Dan Skaggs Byron Raines Barney Boisvert Simon Free Steve 'Cutter' Blades Seth Bienek Katie Bienek Jeff Coughlin

Creating A VARIABLES-Scoped Function Of The Same Name

By
Published in Comments (2)

I have 5 minute before my lunch break is over and I just wanted to try this (not very exciting at all). What happens when you have a VARIABLES-scoped user defined ColdFusion function that has the same name as a built in ColdFusion function. The test:

<!---
	Create a very simple UDF that simply echoes
	back the first argument that it is passed.
--->
<cffunction name="Echo">
	<cfreturn ARGUMENTS[ 1 ] />
</cffunction>


<!--- Assign this UDF to the "Find" key within variables. --->
<cfset VARIABLES.Find = VARIABLES.Echo />

<!--- Now, try to call this both with and without a scope. --->
#VARIABLES.Find(
	"Naughty",
	"Naughty robot!"
	)#

#Find(
	"Naughty",
	"Naughty robot!"
	)#

Running the above code, we get the output:

Naughty
1

Calling the UDF with the original VARIABLES scope calls our UDF. Calling it without the scope invokes the built-in ColdFusion method. Interesting.

Ok, what about if we do the same thing as above, but this time, we do NOT use the VARIABLES scope at all:

<!---
	Set the Echo method directly into the non-scoped
	Find variable.
--->
<cfset Find = VARIABLES.Echo />

<!--- Now, try to call this both with and without a scope. --->
#VARIABLES.Find(
	"Naughty",
	"Naughty robot!"
	)#

#Find(
	"Naughty",
	"Naughty robot!"
	)#

Running the above, we get the output:

Naughty
1

Exactly the same effect whether or not we use the VARIABLES scope. Kind of interesting. Nothing really important here. The only strange thing is that if you do this:

<cfdump var="#GetMetaData( Find )#" />

It gives you the UDF meta data and NOT the built in ColdFusion method meta data.

Ok, back to work :)

Want to use code from this post? Check out the license.

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