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Cold-Fusion

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Cold-Fusion

Application server used in conjunction with a Web server to link a database to a Web site. Using its own scripting language, CFML (Cold Fusion Markup Language), the application server extracts the database information and incorporates it into a Web page each time the page is requested by a Web browser. The Web site therefore contains ‘live’ data, and does not have to be maintained separately from the database. Cold Fusion is thus particularly useful for electronic commerce (e-commerce) systems.

CFML uses a set of special markup tags that are included inside HTML documents. If CFML is included in a document, the file extension is designated as ‘.cfm’. When the Web server receives a request for a file with such an extension, it diverts the request to the Cold Fusion application server, which then assembles the required information. The information is then sent back to the Web server in HTML format, and delivered to the browser.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Cold-fusion research has prospered in Japan, Russia, and Italy and has been pursued in the United States.
Bristling at comparisons to the cold-fusion drama, the Oak Ridge researchers say that their findings withstood extensive peer review before being published.
 
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