I'll take what Servy said one step further.
As far as I'm concerned, there are two outcomes that could have come of searching for this asker's problem using a search engine:
- They found another Stack Overflow question that answered it.
- They did not find another Stack Overflow question that answered it.
In the first case, the question should have either not been asked, or at this point, should be marked as a duplicate.
In the second case, the question is fine being asked here, because it's an actual question that someone had, that's reproducible, and isn't anywhere else on the site. And just for the record, when I performed the suggested search of "coldfusion variable brackets," this was the result--a few questions on Stack Overflow, but nothing related to this.
In neither of those cases is telling the user "you shouldn't have asked this" beneficial. It was either:
- Original, in which case it's fine.
- A sorta-duplicate, in which case it should be closed as a duplicate to act as a sign-post.
- An exact duplicate, in which case it should be flagged for merging.
In none of these situations is saying "try Googling it" beneficial in the answer, or even anywhere else.
You made the right call.
If the answerer feels strongly, which it seems he does, he can roll back the edit himself, which would be an unfortunate move, but no fault of your own.