Book Image

Visualforce Development Cookbook

By : Keir Bowden
Book Image

Visualforce Development Cookbook

By: Keir Bowden

Overview of this book

Visualforce, in conjunction with Apex, makes it easy to develop sophisticated, custom UIs for Force.com desktop and mobile apps without having to write thousands of lines of code and markup. The "Dynamic Binding" feature of Visualforce lets you develop generic Visualforce pages to display information related to the records without necessarily knowing which data fields to show. This is accomplished through a formula-like syntax, which makes it simple to manage even a complex hierarchy of records. "Visualforce Development Cookbook" provides solutions for a variety of challenges faced by Salesforce developers and demonstrates how easy it is to build rich, interactive pages using Visualforce. Whether you are looking to make a minor addition to the standard page functionality or override it completely, this book will provide you with the required help throughout. "Visualforce Development Cookbook" starts with explaining the simple utilities and builds up to advanced techniques for data visualization and reuse of functionality. This book contains recipes that cover various topics like creating multiple records from a single page, visualizing data as charts, using JavaScript to enhance client-side functionality, building a public website and making data available to a mobile device. "Visualforce Development Cookbook" provides lots of practical examples to enhance and extend the Salesforce user interface.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Visualforce Development Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Mobile Visualforce forms


Capturing data from a mobile site can be achieved in a number of ways. The most straightforward, from a markup and code perspective, is to use a standard controller to manage the page and capture the information via a standard <apex:form /> component. This mechanism requires the Visualforce viewstate to be used to maintain the state between the controller and the page, which is somewhat heavyweight for a mobile device and precludes use of Visualforce Ajax functionality, as this would interfere with the jQuery Mobile Ajax page navigation.

The other option is to use JavaScript to send the information back to Salesforce, either via the REST API or JavaScript Remoting. Using the REST API makes an application more portable, allowing it to be easily hosted outside the Salesforce platform, but does consume API calls and can lead to limits being exhausted. JavaScript Remoting allows methods in an Apex controller to be called from a Visualforce page via and does not...