2

I have a couple of places that have some code like this:

<cfinvoke component="#application.path#cfc/eval_faculty" method="getPresentations" returnvariable="presentations">
    <cfinvokeargument name="id" value="#eval_id#">
    <cfinvokeargument name="evalYear" value="#eval_semester#">
    <cfinvokeargument name="department" value="#general.dept#">
</cfinvoke>

<cfset prescheck = 0>
<cfloop query="presentations">
    <cfif local eq "" and regional eq "" and national eq "" and international eq "">
        <cfset prescheck = prescheck+1>
    </cfif>
</cfloop>

I get this error:

Complex object types cannot be converted to simple values.

None of these values in the cfif statement is a complex object.

This worked fine in ColdFusion 8. We just upgraded to ColdFusion 9...

The error occurs on the line with <cfif local eq "" ... >

Any ideas?

1 Answer 1

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<cfif local eq ""

It could be that LOCAL is now a system scope in CF9, like FORM, URL, etecetera. So CF complains when you try to perform a string comparison on it because it is a structure. If LOCAL represents a simple variable in your old code, try using a different variable name.

Update: From the comments, if LOCAL is the name of a column in your query, you could either use a sql alias to give it another name:

  SELECT Local AS LocalAlias FROM Table

... or use a fully qualified variable name:

   <cfif queryName.local ...>
5
  • What if I can't? Local is the name of the database table attribute. :(
    – Bri
    Feb 7, 2012 at 19:26
  • Is this code being used inside a cffunction? You can always alias the column in your query SELECT Local AS LocalAlias. Then use the alias instead. Or you could try using a fully qualified name: ie <cfif queryName.local ...>.
    – Leigh
    Feb 7, 2012 at 19:31
  • Oh yeah. I'm so stupid today. I forgot you can do AS xxx ... but it will not be wise for me to change this as it is used in quite a few places. For now I'm doing query.local. I figured it would recognize local as being in said query scope when I specified the query in the <cfloop>.
    – Bri
    Feb 7, 2012 at 19:32
  • 1
    Yeah, but a scope name will take precedence over query column names. You'd get the same result if you had a database column called "session", for instance.
    – ale
    Feb 7, 2012 at 20:05
  • 2
    @Al - Right, but fully qualifying the name ie queryName.Local should avoid that.
    – Leigh
    Feb 7, 2012 at 20:23

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