With a convention-over-configuration framework like CFWheels, it's important to know these conventions. This is your guide.
There is a specific set of standards that CFWheels follows when you run it in its default state. This is to save you time. With conventions in place, you can get started coding without worrying about configuring every little detail.
But it is important for you to know these conventions, especially if you're running an operating system and/or DBMS configuration that's picky about things like case sensitivity.
CFWheels uses a very flexible routing system to match your application's URLs to controllers, views, and parameters.
Within this routing system is a default route that handles many scenarios that you'll run across as a developer. The default route is mapped using the pattern [controller]/[action]/[key]
.
Consider this example URL:http://localhost/users/edit/12
http://localhost/users/edit/12
This maps to the Users
controller, edit
action, and a key of 12
. For all intents and purposes, this will load a view for editing a user with a primary key value in the database of 12
.
This URL pattern works up the chain and will also handle the following example URLs:
URL | Controller | Action | Key |
---|---|---|---|
Note that the above conventions are for GET
requests and only apply when you have a wildcard()
call in config/routes.cfm
(which is the default). See Routing for instructions on overriding this behavior and how to deal with PUT
, POST
etc.
Controllers, actions, and views are closely linked together by default. And how you name them will influence the URLs that CFWheels will generate.
First, a controller is a CFC file placed in the controllers
folder. It should be named in PascalCase
. For example, a site map controller would be stored at controllers/SiteMap.cfc
.
Multi-word controllers will be delimited by hyphens in their calling URLs. For example, a URL of /site-map
will reference the SiteMap
controller.
See Routing for instructions on overriding this behavior.
Methods within the controllers, known as actions, should be named in camelCase
.
Like with controllers, any time a capital letter is used in camelCase
, a hyphen will be used as a word delimiter in the corresponding URL. For example, a URL of /site-map/search-engines
will reference the searchEngines
action in the SiteMap
controller.
See Routing for instructions on overriding this behavior.
By default, view files are named after the action names and are stored in folders that correspond to controller names. Both the folder names and view file names should be all lowercase, and there is no word delimiter.
In our /site-map/search-engines
URL example, the corresponding view file would be stored at views/sitemap/searchengines.cfm
.
For information on overriding this behavior, refer to documentation for the renderView() function and read the Pages chapter.
A special type of view file called a layout defines markup that should surround the views loaded by the application. The default layout is stored at views/layout.cfm
and is automatically used by all views in the application.
Controller-level layouts can also be set automatically by creating a file called layout.cfm
and storing it in the given controller's view folder. For example, to create a layout for the users
controller, the file would be stored at views/users/layout.cfm
.
When a controller-level layout is present, it overrides the default layout stored in the root views
folder.
For information on overriding the layout file to be loaded by an action, see the chapter on Layouts] and documentation for the renderView function.
By default, the names of CFWheels models, model properties, database tables, and database fields all relate to each other. CFWheels even sets a sensible default for the CFML data source used for database interactions.
CFWheels will automatically look for a data source with the same name as the folder that your application is deployed in. If your CFWheels application is in a folder called blog
, CFWheels will look for a data source called blog
, for example.
Refer to the Configuration and Defaults chapter for instructions on overriding data source information.
CFWheels adopts a Rails-style naming conventions for database tables and model files. Think of a database table as a collection of model objects; therefore, it is named with a plural name. Think of a model object as a representation of a single record from the database table; therefore, it is named with a singular word.
For example, a user
model represents a record from the users
database table. CFWheels also recognizes plural patterns like binary/binaries
, mouse/mice
, child/children
, etc.
Like controller files, models are also CFCs and are named in PascalCase
. They are stored in the models
folder. So the user model would be stored at models/User.cfc
.
For instructions on overriding database naming conventions, refer to documentation for the table() function and the chapter on Object Relational Mapping.
In your database, both table names and column names should be lowercase. The customersegments
table could have fields called title
, regionid
, and incomelevel
, for example.
Because of CFML's case insensitive nature, we recommend that you refer to model names and corresponding properties in camelCase
. This makes for easier readability in your application code.
In the customersegments
example above, you could refer to the properties in your CFML as title
, regionId
, and incomeLevel
to stick to CFML's Java-style roots. (Built-in CFML functions are often written in camelCase
and PascalCase
, after all.)
For information on overriding column and property names, refer to documentation for the property() function and the Object Relational Mapping chapter.
There are many default values and settings that you can tweak in CFWheels when you need to. Some of them are conventions and others are just configurations available for you to change. You can even change argument defaults for built-in CFWheels functions to keep your code DRYer.
For more details on what you can configure, read the Configuration and Defaults chapter.
users
edit
12
users
new
users
index