User Guide

Table Of Contents
Using periods in variable references 57
4.
If a or myVar.a is the name of a complex object, checks whether b is the name of a simple
variable, and returns the value of b.
If myVar is a complex object but a is not a complex object, checks whether a.b is the name of a
simple variable and returns its value.
If myVar.a is not a complex object, checks whether myVar.a.b is the name of a simple variable
and returns its value.
This way, ColdFusion correctly resolves the variable name and can get its value.
You can also use array notation to get a simple variable with a name that includes periods. In this
form of array notation, you use the scope name (or the complex variable that contains the simple
variable) as the “array” name. You put the simple variable name, in single- or double-quotation
marks, inside the square brackets.
Using array notation is more efficient than using plain dot notation because ColdFusion does not
have to analyze and look up all the possible key combinations. For example, both of the following
lines write the value of myVar.a.b, but the second line is more efficient than the first:
<cfoutput>myVar.a.b is: #myVar.a.b#<br></cfoutput>
<cfoutput>myVar.a.b is: #Variables["myVar.a.b"]#<br></cfoutput>
Setting a variable
ColdFusion cannot be as flexible when it sets a variable value as when it gets a variable, because it
must determine the type of variable to create or set. Therefore, the rules for variable names that
you set are stricter. Also, the rules vary depending on whether the first part of the variable name is
the Cookie or Client scope identifier.
For example, assume you have the following code:
<cfset myVar.a.b = "This is a test">
If a variable myVar does not exist, it does the following:
1.
Creates a structure named myVar.
2.
Creates a structure named a in the structure myVar.
3.
Creates a key named b in myVar.a.
4.
Gives it the value "This is a test".
If either myVar or myVar.a exist and neither one is a structure, ColdFusion generates an error.
In other words, ColdFusion uses the same rules as for getting a variable to resolve the variable
name until it finds a name that does not exist yet. It then creates any structures that are needed to
create a key named b inside a structure, and assigns the value to the key.