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			<title>Wayne Graham&apos;s Blog - CFEclipse</title>
			<link>http://swem.wm.edu/blogs/waynegraham/index.cfm</link>
			<description>ColdFusion Development for Academic Libraries</description>
			<language>en-us</language>
			<pubDate>Sun, 22 Nov 2009 16:15:22 -0500</pubDate>
			<lastBuildDate>Mon, 28 Feb 2005 19:59:00 -0500</lastBuildDate>
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				<title>CFEclipse</title>
				<link>http://swem.wm.edu/blogs/waynegraham/index.cfm?mode=entry&amp;entry=5BB12C03-E821-21C9-274961553B7933EE</link>
				<description>
				
				I&apos;ve been using Eclipse for a couple of years now in my computer science courses. I have to say that I fell in love with the abilities of the IDE. The ability to run my ANT tasks to generate my JUnit reports and check projects in/out using both SVN and CVS from within the IDE freakin&apos; rock! 

However, my job doesn&apos;t really require a lot of Java programming. I do a lot more ColdFusion programming, so I decided to check out Spike and Rob Rohan&apos;s &lt;a href=&quot;http://cfeclipse.tigris.org/&quot;&gt;CFEclipse plugin&lt;/a&gt;.

I installed the plugin a few months ago, and I have to say that I was lukewarm to the interface at first. The code completion was nice, but I&apos;ve been using Homesite+ since I started programming and I knew how to use that interface well. 

This weekend I finally broke down and started reading more about how to actually use the IDE. I was immediately floored by how nice some of the more advanced features were. I absolutely love the snippet interface. The ability to create custom snippets using XML and calling that snippet from a control phrase made a lot of the repeative typing I&apos;ve been doing on one of my current projects simply vanish. 

No matter what Macromedia says about Dreamweaver being &lt;em&gt;the&lt;/em&gt; IDE for ColdFusion applications, its still primarily a WYSIWYG (or wusiwyg) that has some coding features. This isn&apos;t to say that CFEclipse doesn&apos;t have some features I&apos;d like to see, like refactoring tools (like those in the Java perspective) and SFTP abilities.
				
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				<category>CFEclipse</category>				
				
				<pubDate>Mon, 28 Feb 2005 19:59:00 -0500</pubDate>
				<guid>http://swem.wm.edu/blogs/waynegraham/index.cfm?mode=entry&amp;entry=5BB12C03-E821-21C9-274961553B7933EE</guid>
				
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