Adobe Wiki
Advertisement
Adobe Wiki
Macromedia ColdFusion Studio 5 box

Macromedia ColdFusion Studio 5

ColdFusion Studio was an integrated development environment (IDE) that was developed for use with ColdFusion server software from Allaire Corporation, and then Macromedia. It was based on HomeSite with CFML tools to support ColdFusion development. The first Cold Fusion Studio to be released by Allaire was for Cold Fusion 3.1 in November 1997.[1]

Allaire Cold Fusion 3

Allaire Cold Fusion 3.1 Studio and Server

After Allaire was acquired by Macromedia, Dreamweaver MX was offered as a substitute, but it also included HomeSite+ (also previously developed by Allaire) for users who were accustomed to using ColdFusion Studio.[2]

Macromedia was acquired by Adobe Systems on December 5, 2005.[3] Adobe ended development and sales of HomeSite in May 2009 and offered Adobe Dreamweaver CS4 as a substitute.[4] On March 22, 2010, Adobe introduced Adobe ColdFusion Builder as their new IDE for dedicated ColdFusion development.[5]

References

  1. Power tools for the Web, by Steven M. Cohn, Network World, p.54. 1997-12-08.
  2. Macromedia ColdFusion Studio 5: Introducing Macromedia Dreamweaver MX, Macromedia. Archived 2002-08-02.
  3. Adobe Completes Acquisition of Macromedia, Adobe Systems. 2005-12-05. Archived 2005-12-07.
  4. HomeSite development ended, Adobe Systems. 2009-05-26.
  5. Introducing ColdFusion Builder by Ben Forta, Adobe Systems. 2010-03-22.

External links

Blog and forum links

Stub This article is a stub. You can help by expanding it.
Adobe ColdFusion
1 (1.5) · 2 · 3 (3.1) · 4 (4.5) | 5 · MX (6.1) · MX 7 | 8 · 9 · 10 · 11 · 2016 · 2018 · 2021
ColdFusion Builder: 1 · 2 · 3 · 2016 · 2018   |   ColdFusion Studio: 3.1 · 4 (4.5) | 5   |   CFML
Advertisement