Book Image

Mastering Application Development with Force.com

By : Kevin J. Poorman
Book Image

Mastering Application Development with Force.com

By: Kevin J. Poorman

Overview of this book

Force.com is an extremely powerful, scalable, and secure cloud platform, delivering a complete technology stack, ranging from databases and security to workflow and the user interface. With salesforce.com's Force.com cloud platform, you can build any business application and run it on your servers. The book will help you enhance your skillset and develop complex applications using Force.com. It gets you started with a quick refresher of Force.com's development tools and methodologies, and moves to an in-depth discussion of triggers, bulkification, DML order of operations, and trigger frameworks. Next, you will learn to use batchable and schedulable interfaces to process massive amounts of information asynchronously. You will also be introduced to Salesforce Lightning and cover components—including backend (apex) controllers, frontend (JavaScript) controllers, events, and attributes—in detail. Moving on, the book will focus on testing various apex components: what to test, when to write the tests, and—most importantly—how to test. Next, you will develop a changeset and use it to migrate your code from one org to another, and learn what other tools are out there for deploying metadata. You will also use command-line tools to authenticate and access the Force.com Rest sObject API and the Bulk sObject API; additionally, you will write a custom Rest endpoint, and learn how to structure a project so that multiple developers can work independently of each other without causing metadata conflicts. Finally, you will take an in-depth look at the overarching best practices for architecture (structure) and engineering (code) applications on the Force.com platform.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Mastering Application Development with Force.com
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Make tools, and compose applications


With the advent of Invocable actions, this has become one of my main architecture goals for all projects. Using Invocable actions, you can create libraries of tools that process builder can compose into functional data manipulation apps. So, when I say create tools, I mean build decision-making methods and data manipulation methods, but leave the two of them separate. This allows you to not only utilize the code in Apex, but to expose additional actions to the process builder and flows. Exposing functionality to the declarative development side of the platform empowers your admins and your development team alike to rapidly make alterations to business logic without having to deploy code. There's an intellectual cost to this method of development. Building methods that manipulate data in clear, predictable ways means your org swells with lots of methods. While numerous, they become a private API specific to your org that can be composed into bigger methods...