DEV Community

Michael Born
Michael Born

Posted on • Originally published at michaelborn.me

Hello World in Coldfusion

Now that you've read my Why Coldfusion? post (you HAVE, right?), let's do a simple Hello World just to try some sample CF code.

Installing Commandbox

Installing Coldfusion is as easy as downloading Commandbox and dropping it in a folder. On Linux, you'll want to drop it in a folder somewhere in your $PATH - perhaps /usr/bin? Otherwise (Windows or Mac) just drop it in a folder and drag the box executable to your taskbar to give yourself a nice quick launcher icon.

Hello World

Let's do a quick Hello World so we know what we're up against.

  1. Create a hello.cfm file. Somewhere. (Anywhere!)
  2. Edit that hello.cfm.
  3. Type in the following code:
<cfscript>
    writeOutput( 'Hello, World!' );
</cfscript>

Ok, so this is the gist of a modern Coldfusion markup (.cfm) file. This file is doing two things:

  1. Using <cfscript></cfscript> to denote the Coldfusion script syntax

This is just CF's version of PHP's <?php ... ?> delimiters. Now, there is a fully-supported, fully-capable tag syntax, but I prefer the script syntax for pretty much everything but templating. I think on the whole, modern CF apps are better off using CFscript syntax - but that's just my opinion. Oh, and you only need this <cfscript> tag in .cfm files - anything in a component (a .cfc file)can launch right into script syntax.

  1. Using the writeOutput() function to print a string value to the buffer

This is hopefully straightforward - we're writing output to the buffer. In this example, we're going to use CommandBox to run the file, so the output will be returned inline to the CommandBox CLI.

Executing a CFM File in CommandBox

Here's how we run our hello.cfm file using CommandBox. First, you'll need to start Commandbox by clicking on the launcher or typing box in your Mac/Linux terminal. Once in CommandBox, we'll use the execute command to run the script and return the output:

execute hello.cfm

Boom! It's that easy to try Coldfusion*. There's no compiling, no building, and no downloading hundreds (or thousands) of dependencies - just run the script.

If you want to see exactly what that looks like, here you go.

*Please note that this is not a production-ready format - for that you'd want to run server start engine=lucee@5.2 to install and start the open-source Lucee server. Let me know if you'd like to see a tutorial about that as well - I'm happy to help you get started!

Oldest comments (0)