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  • Book Overview & Buying Force.com Enterprise Architecture
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Force.com Enterprise Architecture

Force.com Enterprise Architecture

By : Andrew Fawcett
4.9 (10)
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Force.com Enterprise Architecture

Force.com Enterprise Architecture

4.9 (10)
By: Andrew Fawcett

Overview of this book

Successful enterprise applications require planning, commitment, and investment in understanding the best practices, processes, tools, and features available. This book will teach you how to architect and support enduring applications for enterprise clients with Salesforce by exploring how to identify architecture needs and design solutions based on industry standard patterns. As your development team grows, managing the development cycle with more robust application life cycle tools and using approaches such as Continuous Integration becomes increasingly important. There are many ways to build solutions on Force.com—this book cuts a logical path through the steps and considerations for building packaged solutions from start to finish, covering all aspects from engineering to getting your application into the hands of your customers, and ensuring that they get the best value possible from your Force.com application.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
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12
Index

Introducing the Domain layer pattern

The following is Martin Fowler's definition of the Domain layer (http://martinfowler.com/eaaCatalog/domainModel.html):

"An object model of the domain that incorporates both behavior and data".

Like the Service layer, this pattern adds a further layer of Separation of Concerns and factoring of the application code, which helps manage and scale a code base as it grows.

"At its worst business logic can be very complex. Rules and logic describe many different cases and slants of behavior, and it's this complexity that objects were designed to work with. A Domain Model creates a web of interconnected objects, where each object represents some meaningful individual, whether as large as a corporation or as small as a single line on an order form."

Martin's reference to objects in the preceding quote is mainly aimed at objects created from instantiating classes that are coded in an object-orientated programming language such as...

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