The Lucee language supports multiple development paradigms, including object orientation with inheritance and interfaces, and functional constructs like higher-order functions, closures, map(), and reduce().
Lucee was created by the Lucee Association Switzerland, and was forked from version 4.2 of the Railo Server, which is not being developed further.[5][6][1]
Lucee has built-in support for calling and consuming data returned from existing web services, along with the ability to easily configure and expose web services to be consumed. Lucee supports three types of web services:
HTTP (An interface using HTTP verbs, similar to REST, but simplified)
ORM
Lucee has built-in support for the object relational mapping (ORM) framework Hibernate, facilitating Hibernate usage from Lucee code without complex and explicit configuration.
Caching
Lucee has built-in support for multiple caching systems, including Infinispan, Ehcache, and Memcached, and can be extended with additional systems. The cache implementations can be configured within the Lucee server, then used within an application—both explicitly and implicitly—for the caching of database results, function call results, external HTTP request results, serialized session storage, and as a flexible backing store for an in-process RAM-based file-system abstraction.
Virtual filesystems
Lucee supports multiple virtual file systems—built-in abstractions of various local and remote resources—including zip, HTTP, FTP, S3, and RAM. These allow the Lucee server and developer to treat access to an abstracted resource in the same manner as a local file system.
Sample Lucee code
Lucee is derived from the ColdFusion Markup Language (CFML) and therefore has support for both the tag-based and script-based versions of CFML:
Both the above examples will assign the string "Hello World" as the value of the variable myVar, then output that value to the response buffer, typically for display in a web browser.
Lucee Association Switzerland
The Lucee project is led by the Lucee Association Switzerland, a non-profit Swiss association. The association consists of members who help fund and guide the project.[7]
The project also has enterprise, corporate, and individual supporters; these supporters are not members of the Lucee Association, but help fund and promote the project in exchange for certain benefits.[8]
See also
Railo, the CFML engine from which Lucee was forked