Book Image

Salesforce Platform Enterprise Architecture - Fourth Edition

By : Andrew Fawcett
Book Image

Salesforce Platform Enterprise Architecture - Fourth Edition

By: Andrew Fawcett

Overview of this book

Salesforce makes architecting enterprise grade applications easy and secure – but you'll need guidance to leverage its full capabilities and deliver top-notch products for your customers. This fourth edition brings practical guidance to the table, taking you on a journey through building and shipping enterprise-grade apps. This guide will teach you advanced application architectural design patterns such as separation of concerns, unit testing, and dependency injection. You'll also get to grips with Apex and fflib, create scalable services with Java, Node.js, and other languages using Salesforce Functions and Heroku, and find new ways to test Lightning UIs. These key topics, alongside a new chapter on exploring asynchronous processing features, are unique to this edition. You'll also benefit from an extensive case study based on how the Salesforce Platform delivers solutions. By the end of this Salesforce book, whether you are looking to publish the next amazing application on AppExchange or build packaged applications for your organization, you will be prepared with the latest innovations on the platform.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
1
Part I: Key Concepts for Application Development
6
Part II: Backend Logic Patterns
11
Part III: Developing the Frontend
14
Part IV: Extending, Scaling, and Testing an Application
21
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22
Index

Summary

In this chapter, we have taken the first step in developing a robust coding convention to manage and structure the coding complexities of an enterprise application. This first layer encapsulates your application’s business process logic in an agnostic way that allows it to be consumed easily across multiple Apex entry points, both those required today by your application and those that will arise in the future as the platform evolves.

We have also seen how the Unit of Work pattern can be used to help bulkify DML statements, manage record relationships and implement a database transaction, and allow your Service layer logic to focus more on the key responsibility of implementing business logic. In the upcoming chapters, we will see how it quickly becomes the backbone of your application. Careful adherence to the guidelines around your Service layer will ensure it remains strong and easy to extend.

In the next chapter, we will look at the Domain layer, a pattern...