When scoping, there are two things to consider:
- Readability
- Bleeding & Performance
For both of these reasons, I would (generally) recommend you scope ALL scopes both in and out of a CFC class. You will never be surprised by the results if you do this. However, these are two different cases:
Inside a CFC:
ALWAYS scope Variables
as it is a 'protected' scope shared amongst the methods and body of the class. And only use it when you are very sure you are wanting to use it. You can use it like a property member for instantiated classes, but be very careful if you are using it in a singleton class (cached to the Application
scope). This may cause unintended bleeding. Additionally, if there are any outside variables with the same name, you again may unintentionally grab them out of the air. Not what you want. Additionally, not scoping a Variables
scope in a CFC is confusing as there are also local var
scoped values which take no scope prefix. Just scope Variables
here if you use it here.
Outside a CFC:
You can afford to not scope the Variables
in a CFM page/include as long as it is clear, imho. There should be effectively no performance loss as CF will check this scope FIRST (outside a CFC). My general preference is to initially scope when I set/declare it, and then, if it is clear and within visual context, leave it unscoped. If a page is very long, or I have broken a page (like a long report for instance) into chunks (includes), I will make sure I prefix it again so it is very clear where it is coming from. If I consistently scope all other scopes (which I recommend) it should be clear that unscoped is Variables
, but I like it to be clear. Particularly if other people are also working on the code base. So if it is not clear, scope it. Good rule of thumb.
Order of Search:
Lastly, I hate it when people talk about order of searching and then mush together CFC and page scopes. Keep in mind they are different and CF has not documented these very well or clearly (Local
and Var
are 'equal' where last in wins, Arguments
will be found before Local
in a CFC when undeclared or overloaded, Variables
and Property
are intermingled as well). In a page (CFM template/include) the Variables
scope is the default and is searched first. An exception is the query scope within a query block context. Again, not terribly well documented and in CF we don't always think of block scoping like in some languages, but this is effectively such a case. Outside a query context, expect Variables
to trump. If you are not sure of a case, scope it or test it. Also keep in mind that the this
, Request
, Application
, and Session
scopes are not searched when CF encounters a non-prefixed variable.