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Mastering Apex Programming

Mastering Apex Programming - Second Edition

By : Paul Battisson
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Mastering Apex Programming

Mastering Apex Programming

4 (1)
By: Paul Battisson

Overview of this book

Applications built on the Salesforce platform are now a key part of many organizations' IT systems, with more complex and integrated solutions being delivered every day. As a Salesforce developer working with Apex, it is important to understand the range and variety of tools at your disposal, how and when to use them, and what the best practices are. This revised second edition includes a complete restructuring and five new chapters filled with detailed content on the latest Salesforce innovations including integrating with DataWeave in Apex, and utilizing Flow and Apex together to build scalable applications with Administrators. This Salesforce book starts with a discussion around common mistakes, debugging, exception handling, and testing. The second section focuses on the different asynchronous Apex programming options to help you build more scalable applications, before the third section focuses on integrations, including working with platform events and developing custom Apex REST web services. Finally, the book finishes with a section dedicated to profiling and improving the performance of your Apex including architecture. With code examples used to facilitate discussion throughout, by the end of the book you will be able to develop robust and scalable applications in Apex with confidence.
Table of Contents (28 chapters)
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1
Section 1: Triggers, Testing, and Security
8
Section 2: Asynchronous Apex
13
Section 3: Integrations
21
Section 4: Apex Performance

Callouts from invocable methods

When we defined our testProcessInputSuccess invocable method previously, we mentioned that it may undertake a number of actions, including linking the account to the billing or finance system. For many organizations, this will involve making a callout. Similarly, in defining our internal APIs to allow various teams to work together easily, we as developers may build an integration that we wish to expose as an invocable action for administrators within our environment to use.

If we define an invocable method that is going to make a callout, we must include the callout parameter on the method annotation and mark it as true. By default, this parameter is false, and so we must explicitly declare we are making this method callout enabled. In the following code, we can see our testProcessInputSuccess updated to allow callouts to occur:

@InvocableMethod(label='Process Accounts'
  description='Create and process a list of accounts...
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Mastering Apex Programming
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