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Adobe ColdFusion is a commercial rapid web-application development computing platform created by J. J. Allaire in 1995. [3] (The programming language used with that platform is also commonly called ColdFusion, though is more accurately known as CFML.) ColdFusion was originally designed to make it easier to connect simple HTML pages to a database.
(ColdFusion was written in C and C++ until version 6.0, the first Java-based version, was released in 2002.) New Atlanta licensed BlueDragon around 2001 and made it available as a commercial product, eventually creating a .NET implementation of CFML.
It was adopted as a software product name Adobe ColdFusion and a brand of protein bars (Cold Fusion Foods). [190] It has also appeared in advertising as a synonym for impossible science, for example a 1995 advertisement for Pepsi Max .
Adobe ColdFusion Builder is the name for Adobe's Eclipse-based development IDE that can be used to build applications for ColdFusion.The product's original codename, "Bolt", is a reference to the original lightning icon for ColdFusion from the Allaire days.
Adobe later developed animation and multimedia through its acquisition of Macromedia, from which it acquired Macromedia Flash; video editing and compositing software with Adobe Premiere, later known as Adobe Premiere Pro; low-code web development with Adobe Muse; and a suite of software for digital marketing management.
FusionDebug — interactive debugger for Adobe ColdFusion, Railo, and Lucee CFML Engines; FusionReactor — interactive IDE style debugger which includes various extensions/controls for allowing debugging of Java in production environments; GNU Debugger - A popular multi-platform debugger from GNU; Parasoft Insure++ — a multi-platform memory ...
These are articles pertaining to software and libraries that rely on ColdFusion Markup Language. Subcategories This category has only the following subcategory.
Macromedia acquired Allaire in 2001 and was in turn acquired by Adobe in 2005. At Allaire, a version of HomeSite was created as an IDE for ColdFusion, selling as ColdFusion Studio. This version was later merged into Coldfusion MX under Macromedia, and was then called HomeSite+.