Book Image

Learning Salesforce Lightning Application Development

By : Mohit Shrivatsava
Book Image

Learning Salesforce Lightning Application Development

By: Mohit Shrivatsava

Overview of this book

Built on the Salesforce App Cloud, the new Salesforce Lightning Experience combines three major components: Lightning Design System, Lightning App Builder, and Lightning Components, to provide an enhanced user experience. This book will enable you to quickly create modern, enterprise apps with Lightning Component Framework. You will start by building simple Lightning Components and understanding the Lightning Components architecture. The chapters cover the basics of Lightning Component Framework semantics and syntax, the security features provided by Locker Service, and use of third-party libraries inside Lightning Components. The later chapters focus on debugging, performance tuning, testing using Lightning Testing Services, and how to publish Lightning Components on Salesforce AppExchange.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Title Page
PacktPub.com
Foreword
Contributors
Preface
Index

Using custom labels in Lightning Components


Custom labels are used to store constants in Salesforce organizations that can be configured by admins. They are completely configurable, and also allow for translation. If you are building a Lightning component to support multiple languages, all of the hardcoded titles need to be inside of labels, so that the platform automatically takes care of displaying the right label, as per the user settings (user-specified language).

The labels in a Salesforce instance can be created by navigating to Setup | User Interface | Custom Labels and then clicking on the New button. The following screenshot shows how to create a custom label in Salesforce:

To reference this in a Lightning component, the syntax is as follows:

$Label.c.LabelName

So, for a label named Pickone, the component markup can reference it by using $Label.c.Pickone.

In a JavaScript controller, you can get its value by using the following syntax:

$A.get("$Label.namespace.labelName")

Dynamically populating...