Embeds references to ColdFusion pages in CFML. You can embed cfinclude tags recursively. For another way to encapsulate CFML, see cfmodule. (A ColdFusion page was formerly sometimes called a ColdFusion template or a template.)
Flow-control tags, Page processing tags
<cfinclude
template = "template name
">
cfcache, cfflush, cfheader, cfhtmlhead, cfsetting, cfsilent
ColdFusion MX: Changed error behavior: if you use this tag to include a CFML page whose length is zero bytes, you do not get an error.
Attribute |
Req/Opt |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|---|
template |
Required |
|
A logical path to a ColdFusion page. |
ColdFusion searches for included files in the following locations:
You cannot specify an absolute URL or file system path for the file to include. You can only use paths relative to the directory of the including page or a directory that is registered in the ColdFusion Administrator Mappings. The following cfinclude statements work, assuming that the myinclude.cfm file exists in the specified directory:
<cfinclude template="myinclude.cfm"> <cfinclude template="../myinclude.cfm"> <cfinclude template="/CFIDE/debug/myinclude.cfm">
But these do not work:
<cfinclude template="C:\CFusion\wwwroot\doccomments\myinclude.cfm"> <cfinclude template="http://localhost:8500/doccomments/myinclude.cfm">
The included file must be a syntactically correct and complete CFML page. For example, to output data from within the included page, you must have a cfoutput tag, including the end tag, on the included page, not the referring page. Similarly, you cannot span a cfif tag across the referring page and the included page; it must be complete within the included page.
You can specify a variable for the template attribute, as the following example shows:
<cfset templatetouse="../header/header.cfm"> <cfinclude template="#templatetouse#">
<!--- This example shows the use of cfinclude to paste CFML or HTML code into another page dynamically. ---> <h4>This example includes the dochome.htm page from the CFDOCS directory. The images do not display, because they are located in a separate directory. However, the page appears fully rendered within the contents of this page.</h4> <cfinclude template = "../cfdocs/dochome.htm">