| Force.com Workbook | |
| Salesforce Platform Workshop, Summer ’16 | |
| @salesforcedocs | |
| Last updated: July 26, 2016 | |
| © Copyright 2000–2016 salesforce.com, inc. All rights reserved. Salesforce is a registered trademark of salesforce.com, inc., | |
| as are other names and marks. Other marks appearing herein may be trademarks of their respective owners. | |
| CONTENTS | |
| About the Workbook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 | |
| Audience . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 | |
| Version . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 | |
| Supported Browsers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 | |
| Can I Use My Tablet or Phone? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 | |
| Sign Up for Developer Edition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 | |
| Optional: Install the Warehouse App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 | |
| Create an App and Database . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 | |
| Create a Warehouse App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 | |
| Step 1: Build a Cloud App and Database . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 | |
| Step 2: Try Out the App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 | |
| Step 3: Explore the App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 | |
| Access the App from a Mobile Device . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 | |
| Step 1: Set Up Mobile Access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 | |
| Step 2: Try Out the Mobile App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 | |
| Step 3: Explore the Mobile App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 | |
| Add Fields to an Object . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 | |
| Step 1: Add the Price Field to the Merchandise Object . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 | |
| Step 2: Add the Quantity Field to the Merchandise Object . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 | |
| Step 3: Try Out the App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 | |
| Create a New Object . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 | |
| Step 1: Create the Invoice Object Using the Wizard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 | |
| Step 2: Add an Invoice Tab to the App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 | |
| Step 3: Reorder Tabs in the App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 | |
| Step 4: Add a Status Field to the Invoice Object . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 | |
| Step 5: Try Out the App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 | |
| Relate Objects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 | |
| Step 1: Create the Line Item Object . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 | |
| Step 2: Add a Quantity Field . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 | |
| Step 3: Relate Line Items to Invoice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 | |
| Step 4: Look Up Merchandise Items . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 | |
| Step 5: Try Out the App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 | |
| Step 6: View the Schema . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 | |
| Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 | |
| Load Data Using the Custom Object Import Wizard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 | |
| Step 1: Create the Data File . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 | |
| Step 2: Load the Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 | |
| Step 3: Try Out the App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 | |
| Contents | |
| Customize a User Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 | |
| Create Views of Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 | |
| Step 1: View a List of Invoices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 | |
| Step 2: Create a New View . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 | |
| Step 3: Try Out the App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 | |
| Modify a Page Layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 | |
| Step 1: Open the Page Layout Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 | |
| Step 2: Understand a Page Layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 | |
| Step 3: Rearrange Fields on a Page Layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 | |
| Step 4: Add Fields to the Related List . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 | |
| Step 5: Try Out the App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 | |
| Step 6: Edit a Mini Page Layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 | |
| Customize a Layout for Mobile Access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 | |
| Step 1: Create a Page Layout for Mobile Users . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 | |
| Step 2: Display Key Fields Using Compact Layouts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 | |
| Step 3: Add Mobile Cards to the Related Information Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 | |
| Enable Social Collaboration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 | |
| Step 1: Examine the Merchandise Page Layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 | |
| Step 2: Enable Collaboration on Invoices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 | |
| Step 3: Try Out the App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 | |
| Step 4: Enable Notifications for Mobile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 | |
| Add App Logic with Clicks, Not Code . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 | |
| Automate a Field Update Using Workflow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 | |
| Step 1: Examine the Line Item Detail Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 | |
| Step 2: Create a Unit Price Field . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 | |
| Step 3: Automatically Populate the Unit Price Field . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 | |
| Step 4: Update Total Inventory When an Order is Placed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 | |
| Step 5: Activate the Workflow Rule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 | |
| Step 6: Try Out the App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 | |
| Add a Formula Field . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 | |
| Step 1: Calculate a Value for Each Line Item . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 | |
| Step 2: Try Out the App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 | |
| Add a Roll-Up Summary Field . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 | |
| Step 1: Calculate a Total With a Roll-Up Summary Field . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 | |
| Step 2: Try Out the App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 | |
| Enforce a Business Rule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 | |
| Step 1: Understand the Business Rule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 | |
| Step 2: Create a Validation Rule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 | |
| Step 3: Try Out the App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 | |
| Step 4: Modify the Validation Rule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 | |
| Step 5: Try Out the New Rule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 | |
| Create an Approval Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 | |
| Step 1: Create an Approval Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 | |
| Contents | |
| Step 2: Examine the Approval Process Detail Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 | |
| Step 3: Modify Approval Process Actions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 | |
| Step 4: Activate the Approval Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 | |
| Step 5: Try Out the App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62 | |
| Step 6: Configure Approvals for Chatter and Salesforce1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63 | |
| Create a Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63 | |
| Step 1: Add Flow Variables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 | |
| Step 2: Add a Form Screen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 | |
| Step 3: Add a Record Create Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68 | |
| Step 4: Add a Record Update Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 | |
| Step 5: Add a Confirmation Screen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 | |
| Step 6: Add a Custom Button . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73 | |
| Step 7: Try Out the App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 | |
| Step 8: Add a Fault Screen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77 | |
| Analyze Data with Reports and Dashboards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79 | |
| Create a Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79 | |
| Step 1: Create a Simple Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79 | |
| Step 2: Get More Information Out of Your Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81 | |
| Step 3: Add Buckets to Your Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81 | |
| Step 4: Show Your Report Data as a Chart . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83 | |
| Step 5: Embed the Report Chart in a Record Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84 | |
| Create a Dashboard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85 | |
| Step 1: Create a New Dashboard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86 | |
| Step 2: Add a Pie Chart Component . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86 | |
| Step 3: Try Out the App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87 | |
| Step 4: Access Dashboards from Your Mobile App . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88 | |
| Unleash Your Reports with the Salesforce Reports and Dashboards REST API . . . . . . . . . . . . 88 | |
| Step 1: Run a Report Synchronously . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90 | |
| Step 2: Run a Report Asynchronously . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90 | |
| Step 3: Filter Report Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91 | |
| Step 4: Find, Show, and Refresh Dashboards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91 | |
| Enhance the Mobile Experience with Actions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 | |
| Quickly Create Records Using Global Actions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 | |
| Step 1: Create a Global Action . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 | |
| Step 2: Customize the Global Layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95 | |
| Create Related Records with Object-specific Actions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96 | |
| Step 1: Define an Object-Specific Action . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96 | |
| Step 2: Choose Fields and Predefine Field Values . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97 | |
| Step 3: Customize an Object-Specific Layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97 | |
| Secure Your System . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99 | |
| Create a Profile and Permission Set . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99 | |
| Contents | |
| Step 1: Create a Profile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 | |
| Step 2: Edit a Profile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 | |
| Step 3: Create the Manager Permission Set . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101 | |
| Step 4: Create the Salesperson Permission Set . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101 | |
| Create New Users . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103 | |
| Step 1: Create New Users . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103 | |
| Step 2: Test Record Access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 | |
| Step 3: Assign Permission Sets to Users . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 | |
| Step 4: Test Record Access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 | |
| Configure Org-Wide Defaults . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 | |
| Step 1: Modify the OWD for Invoices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106 | |
| Step 2: Test Record Access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 | |
| Share Records Using a Role Hierarchy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 | |
| Step 1: Create a Role Hierarchy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 | |
| Step 2: Assign Users to Roles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108 | |
| Step 3: Test Record Access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 | |
| Code Custom App Logic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 | |
| Explore the Developer Console and Apex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 | |
| Step 1: Start the Developer Console . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 | |
| Step 2: Execute Basic Apex Code . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 | |
| Step 3: Review the Execution Log . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 | |
| Create an Apex Class and Method . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112 | |
| Step 1: Create an Apex Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 | |
| Step 2: Create a Blueprint Class Method . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 | |
| Step 3: Get an Invoice and its Line Items . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114 | |
| Step 4: Create the Final Version of the Class Method . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114 | |
| Step 5: Manually Test the Apex Class Method . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116 | |
| Call an Apex Class Method Using a Button . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117 | |
| Step 1: Create a Custom Button . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117 | |
| Step 2: Add the Button to the Page Layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118 | |
| Step 3: Modify the Apex Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119 | |
| Step 4: Test the New Button . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120 | |
| Create a Database Trigger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120 | |
| Step 1: Create a Database Trigger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121 | |
| Step 2: Manually Test the Trigger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121 | |
| Create Unit Tests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122 | |
| Step 1: Create a Unit Test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122 | |
| Step 2: Run Unit Tests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124 | |
| Build a Custom User Interface with Visualforce . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125 | |
| Code a Custom User Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125 | |
| Step 1: Enable Visualforce Development Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125 | |
| Step 2: Create a Visualforce Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126 | |
| Contents | |
| Step 3: Add a Stylesheet Static Resource . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127 | |
| Step 4: Add a Controller to the Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129 | |
| Step 5: Display the Inventory Count Sheet as a Visualforce Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129 | |
| Step 6: Add Inline Editing Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131 | |
| Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133 | |
| ABOUT THE WORKBOOK | |
| This workbook shows you how to create a cloud app in a series of tutorials. While you can use the Salesforce platform to build virtually | |
| any kind of app, most apps share certain characteristics, such as: | |
| • A database to model the information in the app | |
| • A user interface to expose data and functionality to those logged into your app | |
| • Business logic and workflow to carry out particular tasks under certain conditions | |
| In addition, apps developed on the Salesforce Platform automatically support: | |
| • A public website and mobile apps to allow access to data and functionality | |
| • A native social environment that allows you to interact with people or data | |
| • Built-in security for protecting data and defining access across your organization | |
| • Multiple APIs to integrate with external systems | |
| • The ability to install or create packaged apps | |
| The workbook tutorials are centered around building a very simple warehouse management system. Your warehouse contains computer | |
| hardware and peripherals: laptops, desktops, tablets, monitors, that kind of thing. To keep track of how merchandise moves out of the | |
| warehouse, you use an invoice. An invoice is a list of line items. Each line item has a particular piece of merchandise, and the number of | |
| items ordered. The invoice rolls up all the prices and quantities for an invoice total. It’s a very simple data model, but just enough to | |
| illustrate the basic concepts. | |
| Development proceeds from the bottom up; that is, you first build an app and database model for keeping track of merchandise. You | |
| continue by modifying the user interface, adding business logic, etc. Each of the tutorials builds on the previous tutorial to advance the | |
| app’s development and simultaneously help you learn about the platform. | |
| Audience | |
| These tutorials are intended for developers new to the Salesforce platform and for Salesforce admins who want to delve more deeply | |
| into app development. | |
| Version | |
| You should be able to successfully complete all procedures using the Summer ’14 version of Salesforce. | |
| 1 | |
| About the Workbook | |
| Supported Browsers | |
| Supported Browsers | |
| Microsoft Edge | |
| Salesforce supports Microsoft Edge on Windows 10 for Salesforce Classic. Note these restrictions. | |
| • The HTML solution editor in Microsoft Edge isn’t supported in Salesforce Knowledge. | |
| • Microsoft Edge isn’t supported for the Developer Console. | |
| • Microsoft Edge isn’t supported for Salesforce CRM Call Center built with CTI Toolkit version 4.0 or higher. | |
| Can I Use My Tablet or Phone? | |
| Most of the tutorials can be completed using tablet or phone, although screen size may be an issue with some tutorials, and a keyboard | |
| is convenient for code. In addition, note the following. | |
| • Tutorials that require moving data from a local file system to the cloud may not be possible depending on the capabilities of the | |
| device. For example, if you try to upload a CSV file, your device might only allow you to browse for photos. | |
| • Some tutorials require you to switch between different users, which is much easier if you have two different browsers open at the | |
| same time. If your device is only capable of using one browser, you have to log in and out each time you switch users. | |
| Sign Up for Developer Edition | |
| This workbook is designed to be used with a Developer Edition organization, or DE org for short. DE orgs are multipurpose environments | |
| with all of the features and permissions that allow you to develop, package, test, and install apps. | |
| 1. | |
| In your browser, go to http://sforce.co/YrZZJ3. | |
| 2. Fill in the fields about you and your company. | |
| 3. | |
| In the Email Address field, make sure to use a public address you can easily check from a Web browser. | |
| 4. Type a unique Username. Note that this field is also in the form of an email address, but it does not have to be the same as your | |
| email address, and in fact, it’s usually better if they aren’t the same. Your username is your login and your identity on | |
| developer.salesforce.com, so you’re often better served by choosing a username such as | |
| firstname@lastname.com. | |
| 5. Read and then select the checkbox for the Master Subscription Agreement and then click Submit Registration. | |
| 6. | |
| In a moment you’ll receive an email with a login link. Click the link and change your password. | |
| Optional: Install the Warehouse App | |
| If you want to skip over the 100-level tutorials, you can install the Warehouse app as a package. A package is a bundle of components, | |
| usually an app, that you can install in your org. | |
| The packaged app option is useful for advanced developers or admins who already know their way around custom objects, fields, | |
| relationships, basic UI, and app logic. However, if you’re an experienced developer new to the platform, it’s still a good idea to go through | |
| the 100-level tutorials, especially for the mobile content. | |
| To install the Warehouse app: | |
| 1. Click the installation URL link: https://login.salesforce.com/packaging/installPackage.apexp?p0=04ti0000000Pj8s | |
| 2. | |
| If you aren’t logged in already, enter the username and password of your DE org. | |
| 2 | |
| About the Workbook | |
| Optional: Install the Warehouse App | |
| 3. On the Package Installation Details page, click Continue. | |
| 4. Click Next, and on the Security Level page click Next. | |
| 5. Click Install. | |
| 6. Click Deploy Now and then Deploy. | |
| 7. Once the installation completes, you can select the Warehouse app from the app picker in the upper right corner. | |
| 8. To create data, click the Data tab. | |
| 9. Click Create Data. | |
| Note: If you installed the package by mistake, or you want to delete it, from Setup, enter Installed Packages in the | |
| Quick Find box, select Installed Packages, and then delete the package. | |
| 3 | |
| CREATE AN APP AND DATABASE | |
| Duration: 40–60 minutes | |
| The Salesforce platform makes it easy to build custom apps and databases in the cloud. In this lesson, you learn how to build a basic | |
| app with just a few clicks and then enhance the underlying database as you go along. You also learn how to validate data entry and | |
| load data. | |
| Create a Warehouse App | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 5–10 minutes | |
| Running apps in the cloud is great because there is no server to configure, no software to install, and no ongoing maintenance of your | |
| infrastructure. This tutorial teaches you how to build a cloud app. | |
| At the heart of this app is what you want to sell: merchandise. When you create an app, you automatically create a data object that keeps | |
| track of all the elements of a particular merchandise item, such as its name, description, and price. On the Salesforce platform, these data | |
| objects are called custom objects. If you’re familiar with databases, you can think of them as a table. | |
| An object comes with standard fields and screens that allow you to list, view, and edit information about the object. But you can also | |
| add your own fields to track or list just about anything you can think of. When you complete this tutorial, you’ll have a working app with | |
| its own menu, a tab, and a custom object that tracks the name, description, and price of all your merchandise, as well as screens that | |
| allow you to view and edit all of this information. | |
| Step 1: Build a Cloud App and Database | |
| You can create an app with just a few clicks. In this tutorial, you use the App Quick Start wizard to create an app that can help you manage | |
| merchandise records in a warehouse. | |
| 1. Launch your browser and go to https://login.salesforce.com. | |
| 2. Enter your username (in the form of an email address) and password. | |
| 3. From the Force.com Setup page, click Add App in the Getting Started section. (If you’re starting from somewhere else, look in the | |
| upper right corner, and click Setup.) | |
| 4. Fill in the form as follows: | |
| • For the App, type Warehouse. | |
| • For the Label, type Merchandise. | |
| • For the Plural Label, type Merchandise. | |
| 4 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 1: Build a Cloud App and Database | |
| 5. Click Create and you see right away some of the functionality that’s automatically added. | |
| 6. Click Go To My App to see your new app. | |
| 7. Click Start Tour and follow along for a quick overview of your app’s built-in user interface. | |
| 5 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 2: Try Out the App | |
| 1. Force.com app menu—Shows the apps that are available to you. The app you just created is selected. | |
| 2. Tabs—Provide an easy way to find and organize objects and records. In the Merchandise tab, which is open, you can create, view, | |
| and edit records. The other tabs are the standard feature tabs that are included with every app. | |
| 3. Create records—Click New to add records to your custom object. If you click this button now, you see only one data entry field in | |
| the object, but you’ll create more later. | |
| 4. Force.com Quick Access menu—Quickly jump to relevant app customization features. The menu is available from any object list | |
| view page and record detail page, but only for users with the “Customize Application” permission. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| An app is composed of tabs, but the tabs don’t have to be related to each other. In fact, you can modify custom apps to group all of | |
| your most frequently used tabs together in one place. For example, if you refer to the Accounts tab a lot, you can add that to the | |
| Warehouse app. You can switch between apps you created, bought, or installed by selecting them from the menu. | |
| Step 2: Try Out the App | |
| Your app doesn’t do much yet, but you can start using it right away. | |
| 1. To try out your new app, click New to create a new Merchandise record. | |
| 6 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 3: Explore the App | |
| 2. Add a new merchandise record for Laptop and click Save. | |
| Step 3: Explore the App | |
| Building a simple app is really fast! But don’t let this basic app fool you. Salesforce is a powerful platform that lets you build much more | |
| sophisticated apps just as easily, and without code. Look closely around the screen to see all of the functionality included by default. | |
| 1. Every app has full-text search functionality for all text fields of an object and Chatter feeds. | |
| 2. Every object in Salesforce automatically has an attached "feed," called Chatter, that lets authorized app users socialize about and | |
| collaborate on the object. Using Chatter, users can post updates in an object’s feed, comment on posts, and follow (subscribe to) | |
| 7 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Access the App from a Mobile Device | |
| the feed to get pushed updates when they happen. For example, on a Merchandise record, one user might post a question about | |
| the record, to which followers and other users can comment in reply. | |
| 3. Every DE org has a recycle bin that you can use to view and restore deleted records. | |
| 4. Every record in Salesforce has an "owner," which serves as the basis for a powerful security system that supports ownership-based | |
| record sharing. | |
| 5. You can also manage activities related to a record from the Open Activities and Activity History related lists. Activities include tasks | |
| to perform (making phone calls or sending email), calendar events, and requested meetings. | |
| 6. Every DE org has a Chat window that lets users interact with one another. | |
| Access the App from a Mobile Device | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 5–10 minutes | |
| The simple app you created is already accessible as a mobile app. What? Truly! Most things you create in Salesforce are available via a | |
| mobile device, giving your users full access to the information they need, no matter where they are. As you continue to develop in this | |
| workbook, everything you do in the full site is reflected in the Salesforce1 mobile app. | |
| For the warehouse use case, you can imagine workers in a warehouse typically need to make a physical check of the inventory. Rather | |
| than lug around a laptop or transfer data by pen and paper, they can update on the go, right on the phone. This in turn might be useful | |
| to a service technician on the road, who can instantly see which products are and aren’t available. | |
| Step 1: Set Up Mobile Access | |
| There are two ways to access Salesforce1: using a downloadable app or a mobile browser app. | |
| 1. First, you need to be able to access Salesforce1: | |
| 8 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 2: Try Out the Mobile App | |
| • | |
| To use the downloadable app, use your mobile device’s browser to go to www.salesforce.com/mobile, select the | |
| appropriate platform, and download Salesforce1. | |
| • To enable the mobile browser app, from Setup, enter “Salesforce1 Settings” in the Quick Find box, then select Salesforce1 | |
| Settings, and then Enable the Salesforce mobile browser app. Now, when you navigate to login.salesforce.com | |
| from your mobile browser, Salesforce will recognize that you’re working from a mobile device and redirect you to the Salesforce1 | |
| mobile browser app. | |
| 2. Open Salesforce1 from your mobile device. | |
| 3. Enter your Salesforce credentials and tap Log in to Salesforce. You might be asked to verify your mobile device. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| The downloadable mobile app is usually preferable because the following features aren’t supported in the mobile browser app. | |
| • Today helps users plan for and manage their day by integrating calendar events from their mobile device with their Salesforce tasks, | |
| contacts, and accounts. | |
| • Push notifications alert users to important things when they aren’t using the app. | |
| Step 2: Try Out the Mobile App | |
| Start the mobile app and then look at how the Merchandise tab and its fields appear on a mobile device. | |
| 1. | |
| If you logged in using the downloadable app, you’re prompted to allow access to your data. Tap OK and continue. | |
| 2. On the first screen, you’re prompted to create your first post. Go ahead and tap the Post action in the action bar. | |
| 3. Enter some text like First post!, and then tap Share. | |
| 4. Tap | |
| in the left corner to open the navigation menu. | |
| 9 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 3: Explore the Mobile App | |
| 5. Scroll down and tap More. | |
| 6. Tap Merchandise. | |
| 7. You can easily create a new piece of merchandise from the mobile device. Tap New. | |
| 8. Name it E–reader, and then tap Save. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| You probably noticed that unlike the full Salesforce site, there isn’t a Home tab, and there doesn’t appear to be a Warehouse app. | |
| Additionally, it took some effort to find the Merchandise tab. Why is that? | |
| • Each tab is represented through a menu item in the Recent section of the Salesforce1 navigation menu. Since your app’s Merchandise | |
| tab is new, it doesn’t appear on the Recent section yet until you start using it. After you’ve used the app a bit, the default tabs | |
| (account, case, etc.) are replaced by the tabs you use most frequently. | |
| • Salesforce apps, such as the Sales app or a your custom Warehouse app, don’t appear in Salesforce1, because the mobile app figures | |
| out which records you look at most often. Rather than using the Force.com app menu to customize the tabs a user sees regularly, | |
| the smart search items under the Recent section reorder based on the user’s history of recent objects. | |
| • Don’t get the idea that the layout and navigation are entirely dynamic. You can customize the fields, actions, apps, and the navigation | |
| of virtually the entire mobile app. You’ll get into that in later tutorials. | |
| Step 3: Explore the Mobile App | |
| You get a lot of functionality out of the box with Salesforce1. Take a moment to explore what’s there. | |
| 10 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 3: Explore the Mobile App | |
| 1. You should still be on the detail page for your new merchandise item. You can Edit, Clone, or Delete this record from its detail page. | |
| 2. Swipe left and you’ll see there’s a page for activities related to this item. This is the related information page. | |
| 3. Swipe right from the detail view and you’ll see there’s a blank page for the feed. There will be feed items here just as soon as you | |
| make some changes. | |
| 4. Tap | |
| from the action bar at the bottom of the page, and then notice the list of icons that represent actions. This area is called | |
| the action menu. | |
| 5. Try out an action by tapping Post. | |
| 6. Enter some text, such as Adding an e-reader to inventory and then tap Submit. You can automatically see the post | |
| you created in the feed for the e-reader. Anyone who follows that item will get updates for it. | |
| 7. Tap | |
| , and this time tap New Task. | |
| 8. | |
| In Subject, type Enter a price, and for Due Date, tap the calendar and choose Today. | |
| 9. Tap Save. | |
| 10. From the detail page, swipe left and tap Open Activities, and you’ll see the task you created for yourself. | |
| As you can see, you get the same functionality from the mobile app as you do in the full site—just the controls and navigation are | |
| different. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| • In the related information page you saw activities listed, and you might be wondering if you can add other related things. Yes! You | |
| can add notes, attachments, Visualforce pages, and mobile cards to this page, which you’ll get to later. | |
| • You saw a number of things you can do from the action bar, such as create a post, log a call, create a case, and so on. Of course you | |
| can add and remove items from the tray and rearrange the order. This is all done in the page layout editor and is covered in later | |
| lessons. | |
| 11 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Add Fields to an Object | |
| Add Fields to an Object | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 5–10 minutes | |
| In the first tutorial, you created a cloud app for managing merchandise in a warehouse. Behind the scenes, the platform created a | |
| database for the app. This tutorial is the first of many that teach you how to continue building the database for your app. A database | |
| organizes and manages data so that users can work with it efficiently. Traditional relational databases use tables to manage discrete, | |
| possibly related, collections of information, organized further into datatype-specific columns (attributes) and rows (records). In Salesforce, | |
| you refer to these as objects. | |
| Your DE org comes with many standard objects (for example, Accounts, Products, Tasks) that support pre-built apps. Any new objects | |
| you create are called custom objects. The Merchandise object is one such custom object. In this tutorial you add two new custom fields | |
| (Price and Inventory) to supplement the standard fields the object already has (Name, Owner, CreatedBy, | |
| LastModifiedBy). | |
| The following image is a sneak peek of the data model you will be building, which allows you to view your objects, fields, and relationships. | |
| Step 1: Add the Price Field to the Merchandise Object | |
| A merchandise object should have fields that are used for tracking various information, such as how much individual units cost and how | |
| many units are in stock. You can add custom fields to list or track just about anything you can think of. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Objects in the Quick Find box, then select Objects. | |
| 2. Click Merchandise, scroll down to Custom Fields and Relationships, and click New. | |
| 3. The New Custom Field Wizard helps you quickly specify everything about a new field, including its name, labels to use for app pages, | |
| help information, and visibility and security settings. Create the Price field as follows: | |
| a. For Data Type, select Currency, and click Next. | |
| b. Fill in the custom field details: | |
| • Field Label: Price | |
| • Length: 16 | |
| 12 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 2: Add the Quantity Field to the Merchandise Object | |
| • Decimal Places: 2 | |
| • Select the Required checkbox | |
| c. Leave the defaults for the remaining fields, and click Next. | |
| d. Click Next again to accept the default field visibility and security settings. | |
| e. Click Save & New to save the Price field and to return to the first step of the wizard. | |
| Step 2: Add the Quantity Field to the Merchandise Object | |
| You should already be in the New Custom Field wizard, so you can create the Quantity field in the same manner. | |
| 1. For Data Type, select Number and click Next. | |
| 2. Fill in the field details: | |
| • Field Label: Quantity | |
| • Select Required | |
| 3. Leave the defaults for the remaining fields, and click Next and Next again. | |
| 4. Click Save. | |
| Take a look at this image to familiarize yourself with the Merchandise custom object. | |
| 1. Merchandise detail page—Shows you everything you need to know about your Merchandise custom object. Soon you’ll add | |
| relationships, validation rules, and other neat features to this object. | |
| 13 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 3: Try Out the App | |
| 2. API name—When you created the Merchandise object, you didn’t specify an API name, but one was generated for you. This name | |
| is how the object is referenced programmatically. All custom objects end in __c, which differentiates them from standard objects. | |
| 3. Standard fields—Some fields are generated automatically; these are standard fields. For example, the Merchandise object has a | |
| standard field for Owner, which means it automatically tracks who created each record. | |
| 4. Custom fields—Includes the fields you just created in this step. Like custom objects, custom fields have API names that end in | |
| __c. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| • The custom fields you created so far are nothing fancy, but you can do fancy! The platform has support for nearly any type of data | |
| you want to track, such as currency, email, geolocation, URLs, date/time, and so on. Fields don't just contain static values, they can | |
| be derived from formulas, or take their values from other objects. | |
| • Why do you need an API name as well as the object and field label? A label is what the user sees, so it should be easy to read and | |
| may contain spaces. The API name is used internally in code, and can’t contain spaces or illegal characters. For example, a field | |
| labeled “Customer ph# :” would be named Customer_ph in the code (the system replaces spaces with underscores and removes | |
| the # and : characters). | |
| Step 3: Try Out the App | |
| At this point you have a nice representation of your warehouse items—each has a name, price, and quantity. Time to create some more | |
| inventory. | |
| In the first tutorial, you created one Merchandise record with just a name (Laptop). In this tutorial you create a few more Merchandise | |
| records that include the new Price and Quantity fields. | |
| 1. Click the Merchandise tab to leave Setup and return to the app. | |
| 2. Click Laptop in the Recent Merchandise listing. | |
| 3. Click Edit, and then specify the price and quantity as follows. | |
| • Price: 500 | |
| • Quantity: 1000 | |
| Before you move on, take note how the platform automatically added the new Price and Quantity fields to your Laptop | |
| record. When you add new fields through the wizards, the fields are added to your existing objects and exposed automatically on | |
| your app’s user interface. Nice! | |
| 4. Click Save. | |
| 14 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Create a New Object | |
| 5. | |
| If you created the E-reader item in the mobile tutorial, edit that item in a similar manner. If not, create a new Merchandise record | |
| called E-reader with the following field values. | |
| • Price: 100 | |
| • Quantity: 1500 | |
| 6. Click Save & New and create a merchandise record for Desktop with these attributes. | |
| • Price: 1000 | |
| • Quantity: 500 | |
| 7. Click Save & New, and create a merchandise record for Tablet with these attributes. | |
| • Price: 300 | |
| • Quantity: 5000 | |
| 8. Click Save. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| Take a close look at one of your merchandise records. Notice the Owner, CreatedBy, and LastModifiedBy fields. These are | |
| standard fields which the platform automatically manages. Users have the ability to edit the Name standard field, along with the custom | |
| fields Price and Quantity. | |
| Also take a look at the Recent Items in the sidebar. This handy feature lets you view and navigate to the most recently changed records | |
| in your database. The linked names in this sidebar come from each object’s Name field. | |
| Create a New Object | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 10–15 minutes | |
| To make the Warehouse app more realistic, you need invoices to track orders going in and out of the warehouse. In this tutorial, you | |
| learn how to extend the app further by: | |
| • Creating another custom object, for keeping track of invoices. This object needs a Status field to track whether the invoice is | |
| open, closed, or somewhere in-between. | |
| • Adding a tab to the app so users can work with invoices. | |
| • Reordering tabs for easier navigation. | |
| Step 1: Create the Invoice Object Using the Wizard | |
| An invoice is required to move inventory into or out of the warehouse. In this step, you create an invoice object that allows you to create | |
| multiple invoice statements, each with a unique number, status, and description. | |
| 15 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 1: Create the Invoice Object Using the Wizard | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Objects in the Quick Find box, then select Objects. | |
| 2. Click New Custom Object. | |
| 3. Fill in the custom object definition. | |
| • In the Label field, type Invoice. | |
| • In the Plural Label field, type Invoices. | |
| • Select Starts with vowel sound. | |
| • In the Record Name field, type Invoice Number (replace Name with Number). | |
| • For Data Type, select Auto Number. | |
| • In the Display Format field, type INV–{0000}. (Note there are no spaces.) | |
| • In the Starting Number field, type 0. | |
| 4. | |
| In the Optional Features section, select Allow Reports (in case you create reports later). | |
| 5. Select Launch New Custom Tab Wizard after saving this custom object. | |
| 16 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 2: Add an Invoice Tab to the App | |
| 6. Click Save. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| • The checkbox for vowel sounds ensures that the correct article is used: “a” or “an.” | |
| • The Auto Number data type tells the platform to automatically assign a number to each new record that is created, beginning with | |
| the starting number you specify. Because of the display format you chose, the invoice numbers will be INV-0000, INV-0001, and so | |
| on. | |
| • You could have started invoices at any number, but we started invoices at INV-0000 to remind you that the platform is zero-based. | |
| Step 2: Add an Invoice Tab to the App | |
| When you click the Merchandise tab, a list of Merchandise records appears. Similarly, you need to create a tab that displays Invoices. | |
| 1. | |
| 2. | |
| 3. | |
| If you don’t see Launch New Custom Tab Wizard, from Setup, enter Tabs in the Quick Find box, select Tabs, and then | |
| click New in the Custom Object Tabs section. Then select your Invoice object. | |
| In the Tab Style lookup, choose Form and click Next and then Next again. | |
| It makes sense to display this new tab for the Warehouse app. On the Add to Custom Apps page, clear the checkbox next to all apps | |
| except Warehouse. | |
| 4. Click Save. | |
| 17 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 3: Reorder Tabs in the App | |
| Step 3: Reorder Tabs in the App | |
| Take a look at the tabs across the top of your screen and you see the new Merchandise tab isn’t next to the Invoice tab. You can put tabs | |
| in any order you like, so go ahead and put them next to each other. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Apps in the Quick Find box, select Apps, and then click Edit next to your Warehouse app. | |
| 2. | |
| In the Selected Tabs list, select Invoices and use the up arrow to move it under Merchandise. | |
| 3. Click Save and then take a look at the tabs. | |
| Step 4: Add a Status Field to the Invoice Object | |
| If you try to create an invoice now, you won’t be impressed. There aren’t any fields that you can modify because they are all standard, | |
| auto-managed fields. In this step, you extend the Invoice object to add a new Status picklist field to track the status of each invoice. | |
| 1. | |
| In Setup, enter Objects in the Quick Find box, then select Objects and then click Invoice. | |
| 2. Scroll down to the Custom Fields & Relationships related list and click New. | |
| 3. For Data Type, select Picklist and click Next. | |
| 18 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 5: Try Out the App | |
| 4. Fill in the custom field details. | |
| a. Field Label: Status | |
| b. Type the following picklist values in the box provided, with each entry on its own line. | |
| Open | |
| Closed | |
| Negotiating | |
| Pending | |
| c. Select Use first value as default value. | |
| d. | |
| In the Help Text field, type Choose a value from the drop-down list. | |
| 5. Leave the defaults for the remaining fields and click Next, Next, and Save. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| Before moving on to the next step, recall the Help text you added to the Status field. When users hover their pointer over the Status | |
| field, a pop-up bubble appears with whatever help text you specify. Although it’s beyond the scope of this tutorial, understand that you | |
| can easily create unique translations for app labels and help text so that the app supports multiple languages, again, without writing a | |
| single line of code. Very cool. | |
| Step 5: Try Out the App | |
| Although your app isn’t completely done yet, you can create invoices and save them. It’s not a problem that the invoice is still missing | |
| some fields. When you add more fields to the Invoice object, the new fields automatically appear on the records that already exist. | |
| 1. Click the Invoices tab. | |
| 2. Click New. Notice that you can choose a status for the invoice, but leave it as Open. | |
| 19 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Relate Objects | |
| 3. Click Save. | |
| 4. Click the Invoices tab again and notice there’s a new invoice, with the number INV-0000. Create another new invoice, this time with | |
| a Closed status. | |
| 5. Click the Invoices tab again and see your two invoices. | |
| The database is starting to look better, but it’s still incomplete. An invoice is made up of line items that list the type and quantity of | |
| merchandise being ordered. In the next tutorial, you’ll add another object—Line Items—and then relate that object to the other ones | |
| we’ve created. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| • You only have a few records so far, but how would the page look if you had hundreds of records? Thankfully, the default list view | |
| for a tab shows you only the most recent records you touched and lets you page through sets with standard navigation controls. | |
| • Another built-in feature is list views. A list view is a customized presentation of data that shows only the fields you want, based on | |
| filters you define. For example, suppose you’re only interested in open invoices with a price greater than $1000. You can create a | |
| custom list view that shows exactly those records. This is covered in a later tutorial. | |
| Relate Objects | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 10–15 minutes | |
| In previous tutorials you created objects that stood on their own. The fields on the Merchandise object had no relation to the fields on | |
| the Invoice object. In this tutorial, you create a Line Item object, and what’s special about this new object is that its fields are related to | |
| both the Invoice and Merchandise objects. | |
| • An invoice has one or more line items. In fact, you might say that a particular invoice “owns” its line items. That kind of relationship | |
| is called a master-detail relationship, where the detail records refer to a master record. | |
| • Line items also relate to merchandise through another kind of relationship called a lookup. You already saw something similar in the | |
| Status field. When you create a new invoice, you can choose a status from the picklist. A lookup field is different because the | |
| values come dynamically from a custom object rather than statically from a picklist. | |
| Master-detail relationships and lookups might seem confusing now, but once you implement them, it will all be very clear. | |
| 20 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 1: Create the Line Item Object | |
| Step 1: Create the Line Item Object | |
| Each invoice is made up of a number of invoice line items, which represent the number of merchandise items being sold at a particular | |
| price. You are first going to create the Line Item object, and then relate it to the Invoice and Merchandise objects. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Objects in the Quick Find box, then select Objects. | |
| 2. Click New Custom Object and fill in the custom object definition. | |
| • Label: Line Item | |
| • Plural Label: Line Items | |
| • Record Name: Line Item Number | |
| • Data Type: Text | |
| 21 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 2: Add a Quantity Field | |
| 3. | |
| In the Optional Features section, select Allow Reports, and click Save. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| You might be wondering why Line Item Number is a text field, when what you enter is a number. If line items are numbered, why not | |
| make it an auto-number field, like Invoice? The short answer is that it’s easier to work with text when working with records, and this | |
| tutorial is intended to be easy. | |
| Step 2: Add a Quantity Field | |
| Every line item needs to track the quantity ordered. So the next thing you need to do is add a Quantity field. Recall that the Merchandise | |
| object also has a Quantity field to track how many items are in stock, and the steps to create the field are the same. | |
| 1. On the Line Item detail page, scroll down to Custom Fields and Relationships and click New. | |
| 2. For Data Type, select Number and click Next. | |
| 3. Fill in the field details: | |
| • Field Label: Quantity | |
| • Select Required | |
| 4. Leave the defaults for the remaining fields, and click Next, Next, and then Save. | |
| 22 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 3: Relate Line Items to Invoice | |
| Step 3: Relate Line Items to Invoice | |
| Now that you have all the objects representing the data model, you need to relate them to each other. Line items are related to both | |
| an invoice (an invoice is composed of a number of line items) and merchandise (a line item takes its price from the merchandise). | |
| 1. On the detail page of the Line Item object, scroll down to the Custom Fields & Relationships related list and click New. | |
| 2. For Data Type, select Master-Detail Relationship and click Next. | |
| 3. | |
| In the Related To field, select your Invoice custom object, and click Next. | |
| 4. For Field Label and Field Name enter Invoice. | |
| 5. Accept the defaults on the next three screens by clicking Next. | |
| 6. On the final screen click Save & New. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| One way to think of this master-detail relationship is that an invoice now “owns” its line items. In other words, an invoice can now contain | |
| multiple line items. One of the neat things about master-detail relationships is that they support roll-up summary fields, allowing you | |
| to aggregate information about the child records. You’ll use that feature in a later tutorial. | |
| Step 4: Look Up Merchandise Items | |
| The other kind of relationship you need to create is called a lookup. As the name implies, the field gets its information by looking it up | |
| dynamically in another object. In the last step, you used Save & New, so you should already be on the New Custom Field dialog. | |
| 1. For Data Type, select Lookup Relationship and click Next. | |
| 2. | |
| In the Related To field, select Merchandise and click Next. | |
| 3. For Field Label and Field Name enter Merchandise. | |
| 4. Verify your screen looks like the following image and then click Next. | |
| 5. Accept the defaults on the subsequent screens by clicking Next, and Next again. | |
| 23 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 5: Try Out the App | |
| 6. On the final screen, deselect the checkboxes for Merchandise Layout and Append related list to users’ | |
| existing personal customizations (you don’t want a list of line items on the Merchandise page). | |
| 7. Click Save. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| At this point you have two relationships, a master-detail relationship that allows an invoice record to contain many line items, and a | |
| lookup relationship that relates a particular line item to a piece of merchandise. | |
| Step 5: Try Out the App | |
| As you saw in the previous tutorial, the platform automatically generates a user interface for the objects you create, so that you can view, | |
| edit, delete, and update records. Because you also related the objects, the user interface provides a way of navigating between related | |
| records as well. You can see how all that works by creating another invoice record. | |
| 1. Click the Invoices tab and then New and Save. | |
| 2. Click New Line Item. | |
| 3. For Line Item Number, type 1. | |
| 4. For Quantity, type 2. | |
| 5. | |
| In the Merchandise field, type the first few letters of laptop and click the Find icon. | |
| 6. Click Laptop and then Save. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| If you’re familiar with the products in your inventory, you can type the first few letters of a piece of merchandise and click Save. You | |
| don’t need to click the Find icon, the system automatically finds the merchandise and adds it when you save the record. There’s a lot of | |
| built-in functionality! | |
| 24 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 6: View the Schema | |
| Step 6: View the Schema | |
| You now have three custom objects, several fields, and two kinds of relationships. If you have all of that in your head, awesome. However, | |
| most people find this is an ideal time to use the old adage “a picture is worth a thousand words.” | |
| 1. From Setup, click Schema Builder. | |
| 2. | |
| In the left pane, click Clear All to remove the standard objects from the schema. | |
| 3. Select the checkboxes for Merchandise, Invoice, and Line Item. | |
| 4. Click Auto-Layout to arrange the objects, or manually adjust the layout if necessary. | |
| The Schema Builder shows your objects, fields, and relationships in a standard entity-relationship diagram. In a relationship, the “crows | |
| feet” at the end of the line tell you which side is the “many” side of a one-to-many relationship (one invoice can contain multiple line | |
| items). When you’re done looking at the schema, click Close. | |
| Note: Schema Builder isn't just for viewing your schema, it also supports drag-and-drop development for creating new objects | |
| and fields. However, unlike the wizards you used so far, fields added using Schema Builder are not automatically added to page | |
| layouts. You must configure page layouts before your new fields are visible to users. Field visibility and page layouts are covered | |
| in subsequent tutorials. | |
| Summary | |
| At this point, you have created three custom objects: Merchandise, Invoice, and Line Item. On each of those objects you created custom | |
| fields to represent text, numbers, and currency. Two of these fields have system-generated values: the Status picklist, which defaults | |
| to Open, and the Invoice Number field, which is automatically assigned by the Auto-number data type. You also created user-defined | |
| fields, such as the Quantity entered for each line item. Finally, you expanded on the basic data model by creating two fields that | |
| get their values from other objects; these are the relationship fields you created in this tutorial. | |
| The master-detail relationship allows you to aggregate information, so that an invoice can contain multiple line items, and those line | |
| items can be aggregated. The lookup relationship allows you to pull in dynamic content, so that each piece of merchandise on a line | |
| item automatically gets a price. The relationships also provide additional benefits. You can add up the price of each invoice line item | |
| 25 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Load Data Using the Custom Object Import Wizard | |
| and create a sum total for the invoice, and you can navigate to the related records in a user interface. You’ll learn how to do those things | |
| declaratively in the next tutorial, and later in code as well. Onward! | |
| Load Data Using the Custom Object Import Wizard | |
| Duration: 5–10 minutes | |
| Most organizations keep important data in all sorts of places, including documents and spreadsheets. In this tutorial, you learn how to | |
| load data that currently lives in a personal spreadsheet into the Warehouse app, where everyone in your organization can view and | |
| manage the data. | |
| There are several ways to load data, and this tutorial shows you only one method, using a the Custom Object Import Wizard. This wizard | |
| uses a CSV file as its source. A CSV file is a plain text file with each field separated by commas—thus the name “comma-separated values.” | |
| Prerequisites | |
| Text Editor | |
| This tutorial requires a text editor and the ability to upload a file from your computer. If you’re using a tablet or mobile device, you | |
| may not be able to complete this tutorial depending on the capability of the device. | |
| Step 1: Create the Data File | |
| The first step is to make a simple data file that you can use for this tutorial. | |
| 1. To save you time, download the necessary CSV-formatted text file, from this URL. | |
| https://raw.github.com/joshbirk/workshop2013/master/files/Merchandise.csv | |
| 2. Right-click and save the file locally. It should look like: | |
| "Merchandise Name","Price","Quantity" | |
| "17 Inch Monitor",99,200 | |
| "21 Inch Monitor",129,200 | |
| "25 Inch Monitor",179,200 | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| Note that in the CSV file: | |
| 26 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 2: Load the Data | |
| • The field names are on the first line. These names match the labels for fields in the Merchandise object. | |
| • Text fields are delimited by quotes, allowing you to include spaces and special characters inside a text field. Fields that have a number | |
| data type don’t require quotes. | |
| Step 2: Load the Data | |
| Loading data from a CSV file into a custom object is simple using the Custom Object Import Wizard. | |
| 1. From Setup, in the Quick Find field, type import and then click Import Custom Objects | |
| 2. At the bottom of the page, click Start the Import Wizard! | |
| 3. When the wizard starts, select Merchandise, then click Next. | |
| 4. Select No, and then click Next. | |
| 5. Select None, and then click Next. | |
| 6. Click Choose File or Browse... and select the data file you created earlier, then click Next. | |
| 7. Notice on the Field Mapping step you can match headings in your CSV file to field names in Salesforce. That was already done in | |
| the CSV file, so you can click Next. | |
| 27 | |
| Create an App and Database | |
| Step 3: Try Out the App | |
| 8. Click Import Now! and then Finish. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| Once you finish the wizard, the platform queues the data load. For large sets of data, it may take a while for the data load to happen, | |
| and you’ll be notified by email when the data load completes. If you want to monitor this process more closely, in Setup, click Imports. | |
| Step 3: Try Out the App | |
| Once the data load is completed, go back to your app and confirm that the new Merchandise records are in place. | |
| 1. Click the Merchandise tab. | |
| 2. Next to the View drop-down list, make sure All is selected and click Go! | |
| 28 | |
| CUSTOMIZE A USER INTERFACE | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 30–40 minutes | |
| You already know how to create a basic app and do things like create and relate objects, and customize the standard user interface. This | |
| tutorial goes a step further and teaches you advanced point-and-click development to further enhance the underlying database and | |
| improve the UI. | |
| Create Views of Data | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 5 minutes | |
| A custom object tab in an application is a navigational element that, when clicked, displays data for the corresponding object. For | |
| example, when you click on Invoices in the Warehouse app, you see a default list view of the most recent invoices that you've touched. | |
| This tutorial teaches you more about views and how to create custom views to meet specific needs. | |
| Step 1: View a List of Invoices | |
| Notice how the All view sorts records alphabetically and provides navigation controls for large lists. So, right out of the box, you have | |
| several default views that list invoices. But what if you need a custom view? No problem. | |
| 1. Select the Warehouse app and click the Invoices custom object tab. By default, the Recent Invoices view displays your most recently | |
| viewed records — notice the pick list in the upper right corner of the view. You can update the view display by changing the picklist | |
| to Recently Created and various other options. | |
| 2. Click Go! to switch from the Recent Invoices view and display a list of All invoices. | |
| Notice how the All view sorts records alphabetically and provides navigation controls for large lists. | |
| 29 | |
| Customize a User Interface | |
| Step 2: Create a New View | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| Right out of the box, you have several pre–built views that list invoices, with navigation and sorting. But what if you need a custom view? | |
| Let’s say you want to see only closed invoices. No problem. | |
| Step 2: Create a New View | |
| In this step, you create a custom view that only shows invoices with a status of Closed. | |
| 1. On the Invoices tab, click Create New View and name it Closed Invoices. | |
| 2. Select All Invoices, and specify a filter criteria: Status equals Closed. | |
| 3. A custom view shows only the fields you select. Update the Selected Fields list with only Invoice Number, Status, and | |
| Last Modified Date. | |
| 30 | |
| Customize a User Interface | |
| Step 3: Try Out the App | |
| 4. Select Visible only to me and then click Save. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| Notice that you restricted the visibility of this view. That's a really important feature because you can create views of data for everyone | |
| in your company, groups of people, or a view that only you can see. | |
| Step 3: Try Out the App | |
| In this step, we’ll test out our new view in the app. | |
| 1. To display the new Closed Invoices view from anywhere in the app, click the Invoices tab, select Closed Invoices, and click Go! | |
| 2. When your screen refreshes, you might not have any invoices in the new Closed Invoices view. If this is the case, edit one or more | |
| invoices and change the status to Closed. Now go back to your view of closed invoices and notice the power of custom views. | |
| 31 | |
| Customize a User Interface | |
| Modify a Page Layout | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| At this point, you might think that views are read-only displays of data for a custom object—not so. In the new Closed Invoices view, | |
| move over the Status field for a specific invoice. Notice that a pencil icon appears in the field, indicating that the field is editable | |
| inline, right from the view. Double-click the Status field and the app provides you a way to edit the field. | |
| Modify a Page Layout | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 20-30 minutes | |
| In Create Views of Data on page 29 you learned how to create a customized view for lists of data. However, you can also customize | |
| what's on the detail page for a particular record, or the page layout. Click an invoice and take a look at the default page layout for all | |
| invoices, which should look similar to this image: | |
| 32 | |
| Customize a User Interface | |
| Step 1: Open the Page Layout Editor | |
| This tutorial teaches you more about page layouts and how to modify them. | |
| Step 1: Open the Page Layout Editor | |
| Use one of the following ways to open the page layout editor. | |
| • While on the record page that you want to modify: | |
| – Click Edit Layout. | |
| – Click the Quick Access menu on the right, and choose Edit Layout. | |
| • From Setup, enter Objects in the Quick Find box, then select Objects, click the object you want to change the layout of, | |
| scroll down to the Page Layouts section, and then click Edit next to the layout you want edit. | |
| Step 2: Understand a Page Layout | |
| The editor has upper and lower sections. The upper section is a retractable toolbox called the palette. The lower section is the preview | |
| pane. When you scroll down the page, the palette moves with you, which makes it easy to edit longer pages. | |
| 33 | |
| Customize a User Interface | |
| Step 2: Understand a Page Layout | |
| In the page layout, several sections organize related information. | |
| • The Highlights Panel is useful for displaying key information at the top of the page. | |
| • The Quick Actions in the Salesforce Classic Publisher section is useful for customizing the actions that appear in the publisher in the | |
| full Salesforce site. | |
| • The Salesforce1 and Lightning Experience Actions section enables you to customize the actions that appear in Salesforce1. | |
| • At the top of the Invoice Detail is the area for standard buttons (Edit, Delete, and so on) and custom buttons. | |
| • Next comes the Invoice Detail, which has three default sections. | |
| – Information typically contains fields that users can manipulate at some point during the lifecycle of a record (creation and | |
| updates). By default, this section has two columns for fields. | |
| – System Information typically contains fields that the platform automatically maintains—fields that users cannot edit. This section | |
| is also a two-column layout. | |
| – Custom Links typically contains custom navigation links. | |
| • Below Invoice Detail is a section for Mobile Cards. By default, this section is empty. Mobile cards only appear in Salesforce1. | |
| • Last on the page is a related list for related Line Items. | |
| You can make many changes to the page layout. | |
| 1. Hover over a section title. The mouse pointer changes, indicating that you can drag the section to a new location relative to other | |
| sections. | |
| 2. Hover over the upper-right corner of any section. Two buttons appear: one for removing the section (don't click it!) and another for | |
| editing its properties. Go ahead and click | |
| display the section header, the section layout (one or two columns), and the tab-key order among section fields. Click Cancel. | |
| . You can now edit the name of the section (only for non-default sections), when to | |
| 34 | |
| Customize a User Interface | |
| Step 3: Rearrange Fields on a Page Layout | |
| Step 3: Rearrange Fields on a Page Layout | |
| In this step, make some simple changes to the Invoice Detail area of the page layout. | |
| 1. Click | |
| OK. | |
| for the Information section (see above if you forgot how to find this) and change the section layout to one column. Click | |
| 2. Drag the Owner field above the Status field. When you’re done, the modified Invoice Detail area should look like this. | |
| Step 4: Add Fields to the Related List | |
| As it is now, the related list of Line Items is not very informative—it only has the line item numbers. In this step, improve the related list | |
| by adding some new fields. | |
| 1. Click Related List Properties (the wrench icon above the Line Items section), add Merchandise and Quantity to the | |
| Selected Fields list, then click OK. When you return to the page layout editor, the related list preview should now appear similar to | |
| this: | |
| 35 | |
| Customize a User Interface | |
| Step 5: Try Out the App | |
| 2. That's it—you're done modifying the page layout. At the top of the page, in the toolbox, click Save. | |
| Step 5: Try Out the App | |
| Check out the results of your work. | |
| 1. Click the Invoices tab to return to your app, and then click an invoice that has at least one line item. | |
| 2. Notice the rearranged fields in the Invoice Detail area, as well as the new fields in the Line Items related list. | |
| Step 6: Edit a Mini Page Layout | |
| When you are in the Warehouse app, notice the Recent Items sidebar. Specifically, move over a recent invoice and notice that you get | |
| a mini page popup that previews the invoice information. See below—that's not very informative, is it? | |
| It's easy to change this default mini page layout as well. | |
| 1. Return to the page layout editor for Invoice. | |
| 2. Click Mini Page Layout at the top of the palette. | |
| 3. Add Invoice Number, Owner, and Status to the list of selected fields, and then click Save. The improved popup should | |
| look more like: | |
| 36 | |
| Customize a User Interface | |
| Customize a Layout for Mobile Access | |
| Customize a Layout for Mobile Access | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 25–30 minutes | |
| A well-designed page layout can often be used by both desktop and mobile devices. So far in this tutorial, none of the objects are large | |
| and unwieldy on a mobile screen. However, you can imagine that an object with a hundred fields might be difficult to use on a phone. | |
| In cases like this, it’s useful to create a mobile-specific page layout. Just like the page layout you modified earlier, a mobile-optimized | |
| layout can be assigned to different roles, so that people who primarily use a phone get the mobile version, while desktop-only users get | |
| the standard version. | |
| In this tutorial you learn how to: | |
| • Modify an existing page layout so that it’s optimized for a mobile device—If your users access your app from desktop and mobile | |
| devices, then you might want to optimize your page layouts so that they work with various form factors. However, if your users are | |
| entirely or mostly mobile, they might find a mobile-specific layout is more productive. | |
| • Create a compact layout—Compact layouts determine the fields that show up in a record’s highlights area and the record’s feed | |
| items in the full site. Compact layouts are a great way to display a record's key fields at a glance. | |
| • Add mobile cards to the related information page—Mobile cards can show lookup information or Visualforce pages. | |
| Note: There’s another kind of mobile layout called a global publisher layout, which determines where global actions go. You’ll | |
| learn about that layout when you create global actions in Quickly Create Records Using Global Actions on page 94. | |
| Step 1: Create a Page Layout for Mobile Users | |
| The objects in the Warehouse app don’t have enough fields to demonstrate why a mobile page layout is necessary, so in this step, you | |
| customize the page layout for the Account object. This object isn’t used in the Warehouse app, but it’s a useful exercise for any mobile | |
| layout. | |
| 1. First navigate to an existing account by clicking the (+) tab and then Accounts. | |
| 37 | |
| Customize a User Interface | |
| Step 1: Create a Page Layout for Mobile Users | |
| 2. | |
| In the View drop-down list, select All Accounts. | |
| 3. Click the first account: Burlington Textiles Corp of America. Notice that there’s a lot of information on this page, and it might be | |
| a challenge to navigate on a small screen. | |
| 4. From Setup, enter Accounts in the Quick Find box, then select Page Layouts. | |
| 5. Name the page layout Account Mobile Layout and then Save. | |
| 6. Add a few fields that are important to mobile technicians. Drag the Account Site, Shipping Address, and Phone | |
| fields onto the Fields section of the preview pane. | |
| 7. Click the Related Lists category in the palette, and drag the Cases and Contacts elements to the Related Lists section. Related lists | |
| show up on the record related information page in Salesforce1. When mobile users assigned to this page layout views an account | |
| record’s related information, they’ll see preview cards they can click to see information about the cases and contacts for that account. | |
| 8. Click Save and then No when asked if you want to override users’ customized related lists. | |
| 9. Now you need to assign the mobile-optimized page layout to a user profile. Click Page Layout Assignment and then Edit | |
| Assignment. | |
| 10. Click System Administrator. | |
| 11. In the Page Layout to Use drop-down list, select Account Mobile Layout, and then click Save. | |
| 12. Now when you access the Account object, you’ll do so through the mobile-optimized layout. Try it now by going to Salesforce1 and | |
| tapping Accounts in the navigation menu. | |
| Since you just accessed the Burlington Textiles Corp of America account from the full site, you should see that in the Recent Accounts | |
| list. | |
| 13. Tap that account. | |
| 38 | |
| Customize a User Interface | |
| Step 2: Display Key Fields Using Compact Layouts | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| Normally, after creating a page layout for mobile users, you’d add it to a mobile user’s profile. To keep things simple (so that you don’t | |
| have to log out and switch users), you simply added the page layout to your own profile instead. | |
| Step 2: Display Key Fields Using Compact Layouts | |
| In the previous tutorial you learned how standard page layouts can be used to optimize a layout for mobile users. However, page layouts | |
| aren’t the only thing used to customize how your data appears in a mobile environment. Salesforce1 uses compact layouts to display a | |
| record's key fields at a glance. | |
| In this tutorial, you create a custom compact layout and then set it as the primary compact layout for the Merchandise object. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Objects in the Quick Find box, then select Objects, then click the Merchandise object. | |
| 2. Scroll down to the Compact Layouts related list and click New. | |
| 3. | |
| In the Label field, enter Merchandise Compact Layout. | |
| 4. Move Merchandise Name, Price, and Quantity to the Selected Fields list, and then click Save. | |
| 5. Now you need to set the compact layout as the primary. Click Compact Layout Assignment. | |
| 6. Click Edit Assignment, select the compact layout you just created, and then click Save. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| • In this exercise you only used three fields, but the first four fields you assign to your compact layout populate the record highlights | |
| section at the top of each record view. | |
| • You don’t need to create compact layouts for Salesforce1. If you don’t create them, records display using a read-only, default compact | |
| layout. After you create a custom compact layout you can replace the default with your new layout. | |
| • Compact layouts aren’t just for mobile. When accessing Salesforce from a desktop browser, compact layouts determine which fields | |
| appear when a feed item is created. | |
| 39 | |
| Customize a User Interface | |
| Step 3: Add Mobile Cards to the Related Information Page | |
| Step 3: Add Mobile Cards to the Related Information Page | |
| You’ve already seen the related information page in Step 3: Explore the Mobile App on page 10; this is the page that shows Activities | |
| by default. You navigate to the related information page by swiping left on the detail page for a record. Using mobile cards, you can add | |
| related lookup cards and Visualforce page cards to this record’s related information page. | |
| In this step, you add a related lookup card to the Merchandise object. Merchandise already has a lookup field that’s automatically | |
| generated, Last Modified By, so you can use that. | |
| 1. Open the page layout for Merchandise from Setup by entering Objects in the Quick Find box, selecting Objects, and then | |
| selecting Merchandise. | |
| 2. Scroll down to the Page Layouts section and click the Edit link next to Merchandise Layout. | |
| 3. | |
| In the palette, click the Expanded Lookups category. | |
| 4. Drag Last Modified By to the Mobile Cards section, and then click Save. | |
| 5. To test it out, go back to your mobile device and look at a piece of merchandise. | |
| 6. Swipe left to get to get to the related information page and you’ll see the mobile card you added. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| • You don’t have any Visualforce pages yet, but once you’ve enabled one for mobile, you can add those pages to the Mobile Cards | |
| section like you just did. | |
| • You can also use the Mobile Cards section to add elements from the Components category. That category doesn’t appear in this | |
| tutorial, because no components are available on custom objects. | |
| • Unlike compact layouts, mobile cards only appear in Salesforce1. | |
| 40 | |
| Customize a User Interface | |
| Enable Social Collaboration | |
| Enable Social Collaboration | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 5–10 minutes | |
| Users can follow merchandise records and collaborate on them using Chatter. When you are following a record, the platform automatically | |
| pushes notifications about updates to you. The feed for the record becomes a running log where users can collaborate on the data | |
| record by posting comments, files, links, and more. | |
| If you look at the default Invoice page layout in the Warehouse app, social collaboration isn't available. Why not? When you created the | |
| Warehouse app, the app wizard automatically enabled feed tracking on the original object—in this case, Merchandise. However, for | |
| new custom objects, the platform doesn’t enable feed tracking by default. But it's easy to enable this functionality yourself in just a | |
| minute or two. | |
| Once you’ve enabled feed tracking, you can also receive notifications on your mobile device, so that you’ll know when someone comments | |
| on your post or otherwise interacts with you. At the end of this tutorial you enable push notifications, which will send alerts to your | |
| mobile device, even when you’re not using the Salesforce1 downloadable app. | |
| Step 1: Examine the Merchandise Page Layout | |
| Take a look at how Merchandise already has a feed. | |
| 1. Click the Merchandise tab. | |
| 2. Click into any piece of merchandise and review the Merchandise page layout. Notice the top half of the page is dedicated to social | |
| collaboration. You can follow a piece of merchandise, attach files, and post useful links. You want that functionality for invoices too. | |
| 41 | |
| Customize a User Interface | |
| Step 2: Enable Collaboration on Invoices | |
| Step 2: Enable Collaboration on Invoices | |
| To enabled feed tracking: | |
| 1. From Setup, enter feed in the Quick Find box. | |
| 2. Click Feed Tracking. | |
| 42 | |
| Customize a User Interface | |
| Step 3: Try Out the App | |
| 3. Notice two fields are being tracked for Merchandise. Take a look at your Invoice object, and notice no fields are being tracked. | |
| 4. To enable feed tracking for Invoice, click Invoice, select Enable Feed Tracking, select Status, and click Save. | |
| Step 3: Try Out the App | |
| Now that you've finished modifying the Invoice page layout, have a look around. | |
| 1. Click the Invoices tab, click into the detail page for an Invoice, and notice that the Chatter feed for an Invoice is now available. | |
| 2. You can collaborate on this invoice by clicking Follow. Now if you update an invoice (to change it from Closed to Open for example), | |
| anything that happens to the invoice status will automatically appear in your Chatter feed, and the feed of anyone else who follows | |
| this invoice. | |
| 43 | |
| Customize a User Interface | |
| Step 4: Enable Notifications for Mobile | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| This tutorial only touches on Chatter, focusing on the feeds for a custom object. From the app menu in the upper right, select Salesforce | |
| Chatter to see a feed-centric view of data in your organization. The Chatter app lets you securely collaborate with other users in your | |
| organization—kind of like a private, secure Facebook just for you and your coworkers. | |
| Step 4: Enable Notifications for Mobile | |
| Once you’ve enabled a feed, you will see those updates in Chatter, but you can also receive updates on your mobile device, even when | |
| your app isn’t running! To receive these updates, you need to enable notifications. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Salesforce1 Notifications in the Quick Find box, then select Salesforce1 Notifications | |
| 2. Select the notifications you want your Salesforce1 users to receive. | |
| 3. | |
| If you’re authorized to do so for your company, select Include full content in push notifications. | |
| 44 | |
| Customize a User Interface | |
| Step 4: Enable Notifications for Mobile | |
| 4. Click Save. If you checked the box to include full content in push notifications, a pop-up appears displaying terms and conditions. | |
| Click OK or Cancel. By enabling this option, you’re agreeing to the terms and conditions on behalf of your company. For details, see | |
| Salesforce1 Mobile App Notifications in the Salesforce help. | |
| Now when someone mentions you in a post or comments on a post you created, you’ll get a notification on your device, even when | |
| your Salesforce1 downloadable app isn’t running! You can’t see any notifications yet, because you need to create another user to make | |
| some updates. You’ll do that in a later lesson. | |
| 45 | |
| ADD APP LOGIC WITH CLICKS, NOT CODE | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 30–40 minutes | |
| At this point you already know how to create a basic app and do things like create and relate objects, and customize the standard user | |
| interface. In this set of tutorials, you’ll go a step further by learning advanced point-and-click development to further enhance the | |
| underlying database and improve the UI. | |
| Automate a Field Update Using Workflow | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 10–15 minutes | |
| Your company can operate more efficiently with standardized internal procedures and automated business processes. In Salesforce, you | |
| can use workflow rules to automate your procedures and processes. Workflow rules can trigger actions (such as email alerts, tasks, field | |
| updates, and outbound messages) based on time triggers, criteria, and formulas. | |
| Automatically populating a field with a default value is a common business rule. Recall that you did something similar already using a | |
| lookup field on two related objects. A Line Item can “look up” merchandise and give the user a choice of which item they want. But what | |
| if, rather than having a user choose, populating the field was done automatically? That’s when you need a workflow rule, so that depending | |
| on different conditions, Salesforce can automatically populate a field with the appropriate value, and without user intervention. | |
| Step 1: Examine the Line Item Detail Page | |
| To get started, quickly review the Invoice and Line Item objects from earlier tutorials. | |
| 1. Select the Warehouse app from the app picker, then click the Invoices tab. | |
| 2. Open any invoice, and then open the detail page for a line item. Notice there’s no price field for the line item. | |
| 46 | |
| Add App Logic with Clicks, Not Code | |
| Step 2: Create a Unit Price Field | |
| In this tutorial, you create a new field for the Line Item object called Unit Price. You don’t want users creating their own price, and | |
| since the price is already stored in the Merchandise object, you can populate this field automatically using a neat feature called a workflow | |
| rule. | |
| Step 2: Create a Unit Price Field | |
| The steps for creating the new Unit Price field are essentially the same as when you created the Price field on the Merchandise | |
| object except this time name the field Unit Price. | |
| 1. From the Line Item tab or record, click the Quick Access menu (the tab that pops out from the right side of the window), hover over | |
| View Fields and click New. (If you aren't on the Line Item object already, in Setup, enter Objects in the Quick Find box, then | |
| select Objects. Then click Line Item, and in the Custom Fields and Relationships section, click New.) | |
| 2. For the data type, select Currency and then click Next. | |
| 3. Fill in the custom field details as follows. | |
| • Field Label: Unit Price | |
| • Length: 16 | |
| • Decimal Places: 2 | |
| 4. Leave the defaults for the remaining fields by clicking Next on subsequent screens until you can Save. | |
| 5. Now go back to an existing Invoice and add a new Line Item. Notice there's a new field for Unit Price, but you have to populate | |
| that field manually. You want this field to populate automatically, so click Cancel, and add this new functionality. | |
| Step 3: Automatically Populate the Unit Price Field | |
| To automatically populate the new Unit Price field, create a workflow rule. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Workflow Rules in the Quick Find box, then select Workflow Rules. | |
| 2. Optionally, read the brief introduction, click Continue, and then click New Rule. | |
| 3. Select the Line Item object, and click Next. | |
| 4. For the rule name, enter Populate Unit Price, and for the description enter something like Populates the Line | |
| Item object’s Unit Price field with the value of the Merchandise object’s Price | |
| field. | |
| 5. For evaluation criteria, select created. | |
| 47 | |
| Add App Logic with Clicks, Not Code | |
| Step 3: Automatically Populate the Unit Price Field | |
| 6. | |
| In the first rule criteria row, for the field select Line Item: Quantity, for the operator select greater or equal, and | |
| for the value enter 1. | |
| 7. Click Save & Next. | |
| Note: It makes sense to fire this workflow rule only for new line item records because you are effectively assigning a default | |
| field value when creating a new record. Later on, users might need to adjust the price of merchandise in each line item (for | |
| example, to offer discounts). | |
| Continuing on, the next step is to assign an action to the workflow rule to update the Unit Price field automatically. | |
| 1. Click the drop-down list that reads Add Workflow Action and choose New Field Update. | |
| 2. | |
| 3. | |
| In the Name field, enter Copy Unit Price. | |
| In the Field to Update list, choose Line Item and then Unit Price. | |
| 4. Select the option to use a formula to set the new value. Before continuing, confirm that your screen matches the following. | |
| 48 | |
| Add App Logic with Clicks, Not Code | |
| Step 3: Automatically Populate the Unit Price Field | |
| 5. Click Show Formula Editor, and then click Insert Field. | |
| 6. | |
| In the first column choose Line Item >, in the second column choose Merchandise >, and in the third column choose Price. | |
| 7. Confirm that your screen matches the following, and then click Insert. | |
| 8. Click Save, and then click Done to return to the detail page of the new workflow rule. | |
| Tell Me More... | |
| In the formula, notice some new syntax, namely "Merchandise__r". You’ve seen __c used already, so what’s with the __r? That’s | |
| the platform’s object notation for a field that’s related to another object. You can use related fields to traverse object relationships and | |
| access related fields. In this case, the formula uses the relationship between the Line Item record and Merchandise object to get the | |
| corresponding Merchandise record's value for Price. | |
| 49 | |
| Add App Logic with Clicks, Not Code | |
| Step 4: Update Total Inventory When an Order is Placed | |
| Step 4: Update Total Inventory When an Order is Placed | |
| The inventory of merchandise should be automatically maintained as orders are placed. When you create a new invoice ("Open" status), | |
| every new line item needs to decrease the total inventory by the number of units sold. Similarly, updates to an existing line item need | |
| to update the total inventory by the difference in units sold. | |
| There are a few different ways you can make this update. You could do this in Apex code, or by creating a Flow, or by creating another | |
| workflow rule. For simplicity, you’ll stick with workflow for now, but there is one minor problem to fix first, which is that the workflow | |
| field update won’t work with a lookup relationship. So the first step is to change the lookup to a master-detail. Fortunately, the platform | |
| makes such changes very easy. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Objects in the Quick Find box, then select Objects, and click Line Item. | |
| 2. Scroll down to Custom Fields and Relationships, and next to Merchandise click Edit. | |
| 3. Click Change Field Type, and then select Master-Detail Relationship. | |
| 4. Click Next, and then Save. | |
| Now you can create the workflow rules. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Workflow Rules in the Quick Find box, then select Workflow Rules | |
| 2. On the All Workflow Rules page, click New Rule. | |
| 3. Select Line Item as the object, and click Next. | |
| 4. | |
| In the Rule Name field, enter Line Item Updated. | |
| 5. For Evaluate the rule when a record is: select created, and every time it’s edited. | |
| 6. | |
| 7. | |
| In the Rule Criteria field, leave criteria are met selected. | |
| In the Field drop-down list, select Invoice: Status. In Operator, select equals. For Value, click the lookup icon and choose | |
| Open, and click Insert Selected. | |
| 8. Click Save & Next. | |
| 9. Click Add Workflow Action and choose New Field Update. The New Field Update wizard opens. | |
| 10. In the Name field, enter Update Stock Inventory. | |
| 11. In the first Field to Update drop-down list, select Merchandise. In the second, select Quantity. | |
| 12. Select Use a formula to set the new value. | |
| 13. Click Show Formula Editor. | |
| 14. Click Insert Field and choose Line Item > Merchandise > Quantity. Click Insert to add the field to the editor. | |
| 15. Click Insert Operator and choose – Subtract. | |
| 16. Click Insert Field and choose Line Item > Quantity. Click Insert to add the field to the editor. | |
| The completed formula should be Merchandise__r.Quantity__c - Quantity__c. | |
| 17. Click Check Syntax, and make corrections if necessary. | |
| 18. Click Save to close the New Field Update wizard and return to Step 3 of the Workflow wizard. | |
| 19. Click Done. | |
| Step 5: Activate the Workflow Rule | |
| This is a tiny step, but it’s an important one. By default, workflow rules are not active. | |
| 50 | |
| Add App Logic with Clicks, Not Code | |
| Step 6: Try Out the App | |
| 1. | |
| In Setup, enter Workflow Rules in the Quick Find box, then select Workflow Rules to get to the All Workflow Rules | |
| page. | |
| 2. Next to Line Item Updated and Populate Unit Price, you’ll see an Activate link. Click the link next to each workflow rule. | |
| Tell Me More... | |
| Workflow rules are not activated by default because you might turn off workflow rules when running bulk processes. For example, you | |
| might want to update a whole bunch of records at the same time, and firing the workflow rule each time wouldn’t invalidate your | |
| processes. Workflow rules can also do things like send email updates, and you might not want to send thousands of emails when you’re | |
| doing a simple price change. | |
| Step 6: Try Out the App | |
| Now try out the revised app and see how the new workflow rule implements your business logic. | |
| 1. Click the Invoices tab and either create a new Invoice or edit an existing Invoice. | |
| 2. Add a New Line Item and after you've chosen the Merchandise, click Save. | |
| 3. Click back into the detail page for the new Line Item and notice how the first workflow rule you created automatically populated | |
| the Unit Price field by looking up the Price of the Merchandise that you selected. Sweet. | |
| Add a Formula Field | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 5–10 minutes | |
| Another thing that’s missing from the Line Item object is a Line Item Total field that displays the product of each Line Item’s Quantity | |
| and Unit Price. In this tutorial, you implement this common business logic by creating a new formula field in the Line Item object, again, | |
| without writing any code. | |
| Step 1: Calculate a Value for Each Line Item | |
| In the first step of this tutorial, you’ll add a new calculated field called Line Item Total to the line item. This field multiplies the number | |
| of items with the price and acts as a total for each line item. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Objects in the Quick Find box, then select Objects. | |
| 2. Click the Line Item object. Then, in the Custom Fields & Relationships related list, click New. | |
| 51 | |
| Add App Logic with Clicks, Not Code | |
| Step 2: Try Out the App | |
| 3. Choose Formula, and click Next. | |
| 4. For Field Label, enter Line Item Total. | |
| 5. For Formula Return Type, choose Currency and click Next. | |
| 6. Click the Insert Merge Field drop-down list, and choose Unit Price. You should now see Unit_Price__c in the text box. | |
| 7. Click the Insert Operator drop-down list and choose Multiply. | |
| 8. | |
| In the Insert Merge Field drop-down list, select Quantity. You should now see Unit_Price__c * Quantity__c in the | |
| text box. | |
| 9. Click Next, Next, and then Save. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| The Formula field type is great for automatically deriving field values from other values, as you have done here. The formula you entered | |
| was quite straightforward: a simple multiplication of two field values on the same record. There's also an Advanced Formula tab, which | |
| allows you to do much more with these formulas. | |
| Step 2: Try Out the App | |
| To see the new Line Item Total formula field in action, you’ll need to create a new line item. | |
| 52 | |
| Add App Logic with Clicks, Not Code | |
| Add a Roll-Up Summary Field | |
| 1. Click the Invoices tab and then click an existing invoice. | |
| 2. Add a new line item, select a piece of merchandise, and enter a quantity. | |
| 3. Save the line item and you can see the formula field in action. | |
| Add a Roll-Up Summary Field | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 5–10 minutes | |
| Another thing that's missing from the Invoice is a field that aggregates all of the line items into one big invoice total. This is easy to do | |
| if the objects are in a master-detail relationship, because you can use a roll-up summary field. | |
| Step 1: Calculate a Total With a Roll-Up Summary Field | |
| Now that you have the total for each line item, it makes sense to add them all to get the invoice total. Because the line items have a | |
| master-detail relationship with the invoice, you can use a roll-up summary field to calculate this value. Roll-up summary is a special type | |
| of field that lets you aggregate information about related detail (child) objects. In this case, you want to sum the value of each line item. | |
| 1. Navigate back to the Invoice custom object page from Setup by entering Objects in the Quick Find box, then selecting | |
| Objects and then clicking Invoice. | |
| 2. | |
| In the Custom Fields & Relationships related list click New. | |
| 3. Choose Roll-Up Summary as the data type, and click Next. | |
| 4. For the Field Label field, enter Invoice Total, and click Next. | |
| 5. | |
| In the Summarized Object list choose Line Items. | |
| 6. For Roll Up Type, select Sum. | |
| 7. | |
| In the Field to Aggregate list choose Line Item Total. | |
| 8. Verify that your screen looks like this. Then click Next, Next and Save. | |
| 53 | |
| Add App Logic with Clicks, Not Code | |
| Step 2: Try Out the App | |
| Step 2: Try Out the App | |
| To see the new Invoice Total formula field in action, you only need to examine an invoice. | |
| 1. Click the Invoices tab and then click an existing invoice. | |
| 2. Notice the new Invoice Total field that “rolls up” all the values from the detail object’s Line Item Totals. | |
| 3. To get the Line Item Total field to appear on the detail page, you’ll have to edit the page layout. (If you haven’t done that yet, see | |
| Modify a Page Layout on page 32). When you do, it should look like the following image. | |
| Enforce a Business Rule | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 5–10 minutes | |
| Typically, every business app enforces rules that prevent bad data from getting into the system. Without such rules, things can get really | |
| messy, really fast because users might not adhere to these rules on their own. In this tutorial, you learn how to enforce a basic business | |
| rule for the Warehouse app—you can’t order zero or negative items. To do this, you create and test a validation rule, all in just a couple | |
| of minutes without any coding. | |
| Step 1: Understand the Business Rule | |
| Before you begin, make sure you have a clear understanding of this particular business rule. | |
| 54 | |
| Add App Logic with Clicks, Not Code | |
| Step 2: Create a Validation Rule | |
| 1. Select the Warehouse app. | |
| 2. Click the Invoices tab, select an invoice, and look at a specific line item. | |
| 3. Play around with the quantity field for the line item. Notice that a value is required, but that you can set the value to any number: 0, | |
| -10, 3.14159. You don’t want users entering bad data (such as negative numbers), so this situation isn’t acceptable. | |
| Step 2: Create a Validation Rule | |
| Enforcing basic business rules is easy and doesn’t require any coding. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Objects in the Quick Find box, then select Objects, click Line Item, scroll down to the Validation Rules | |
| related list, and click New. | |
| 2. For Rule Name type Validate_Quantity. | |
| 3. Optionally fill out the Description field. It’s a good practice to document business logic so that other developers can easily | |
| understand the purpose of the rule. Use the documentation links if you need extra help on this page. | |
| 4. | |
| In the Error Condition Formula area, you build a validation rule’s error condition formula to identify when the error condition evaluates | |
| to TRUE. | |
| a. Click Insert Field to open the Insert Field popup window. | |
| b. Select Line Item > in the first column and Quantity in the second column. | |
| c. Click Insert. | |
| d. Type the less-than-or-equal-to symbol (<=) and the numeral 0, so the formula looks like: | |
| Quantity__c <= 0 | |
| 5. Click Check Syntax to make sure there are no errors. If you do find errors, fix them before proceeding. | |
| 55 | |
| Add App Logic with Clicks, Not Code | |
| Step 2: Create a Validation Rule | |
| 6. | |
| In the Error Message field, type You must order at least one item. | |
| 7. For the Error Location, select Field, then choose Quantity from the drop-down list. | |
| 8. Click Save. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| Take a quick look at the Validation Rule Detail page. Notice that the new validation rule is “Active” meaning that the platform is currently | |
| enforcing the rule. Validation rules, unlike workflow rules, default to active. In certain situations, you might want to deactivate the rule | |
| temporarily (for example, before loading a bunch of data). This is easy to do by simply deselecting the Active box (but don’t do this | |
| now). | |
| 56 | |
| Add App Logic with Clicks, Not Code | |
| Step 3: Try Out the App | |
| Step 3: Try Out the App | |
| Now that the rule is in place and active, it’s time to give it a try. | |
| 1. Click the Invoices tab and select an existing invoice. | |
| 2. Click New Line Item | |
| 3. Enter a line item number and a quantity of –1. | |
| 4. Once you choose a merchandise item and click Save, you’ll see the error message that you set up for the rule. | |
| 5. Fix the error by entering a valid quantity and then Save. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| • If you didn’t see the error message, check the validation formula again. You need to make the rule fire when the condition evaluates | |
| to TRUE. | |
| • The formula in this tutorial is rather simple, but don’t let that fool you. The platform’s formula syntax empowers you to enforce a | |
| wide range of business rules that not only includes one object, but pulls in other related objects as well. | |
| Step 4: Modify the Validation Rule | |
| Modify the existing validation rule to check how many items are in stock. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Objects in the Quick Find box, select Objects, select Line Item, scroll down to the Validation Rules | |
| related list, and edit the Validate_Quantity rule. | |
| 2. Edit the Description field to explain that it won’t allow users to order more items than are in stock. | |
| 3. | |
| In the Error Condition Formula area, start by putting some parentheses around the first rule, insert the logical OR operator, and then | |
| add another set of parentheses so that the error condition looks like this: | |
| (Quantity__c <= 0) || () | |
| 4. Click between the second set of parentheses, then click Insert Field to open the Insert Field popup window. | |
| 5. Leave Line Item > selected in the first column, select Quantity in the second column, and then click Insert. | |
| 6. Type or insert the greater-than symbol (>). | |
| 7. Click Insert Field and select Line Item > in the first column, Merchandise > in the second column, and Quantity | |
| in the third column. | |
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| Step 5: Try Out the New Rule | |
| 8. Click Insert and verify the code looks like the following: | |
| (Quantity__c <= 0) || (Quantity__c > Merchandise__r.Quantity__c) | |
| 9. Click Check Syntax to make sure there are no errors. | |
| 10. Finally, edit the Error Message field to add You can’t order more items than are in stock, and then | |
| Save. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| Take a look at the formula you created. | |
| • Mechandise__r—Because the Merchandise object is related to the Line Item object, the platform lets you navigate from a line | |
| item record to a merchandise record; that's what the Mechandise__r is doing. | |
| • Quantity__c—This is the field you created to track the total amount of stock on a merchandise record. | |
| • Merchandise__r.Quantity__c—This tells the system to retrieve the value of Quantity field on the related merchandise | |
| record. | |
| • Quantity__c—This refers to the Quantity field on the current (line item) record. | |
| Putting it all together, the formula checks that the total inventory on the related merchandise record is less than the number of units | |
| being sold. As indicated on the Error Condition Formula page, you need to provide a formula that is true if an error should be displayed, | |
| and this is just what you want: it will only be true when the total inventory is less than the units sold. | |
| Step 5: Try Out the New Rule | |
| Now that the modified rule is in place, test it. | |
| 1. Click the Invoices tab and select an existing invoice. | |
| 2. Create a New Line Item and type a quantity of 6000. | |
| 3. Choose a merchandise item, and click Save. You see the error message that you set up for the rule. | |
| 4. Fix the error by entering a valid quantity, and then click Save. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| • Validation rules and formulas combine to create really powerful business logic, with very little development effort. | |
| • For a list of sample validation rules, make sure to read “Examples of Validation Rules” in the Salesforce Help: | |
| https://help.salesforce.com/HTViewHelpDoc?id=fields_useful_field_validation_formulas.htm. | |
| Create an Approval Process | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 10–15 minutes | |
| An approval process specifies the steps necessary for a record to be approved and who must approve it at each step. A step can apply | |
| to all records included in the process or just records that have certain attributes. An approval process also specifies the actions to take | |
| when a record is first submitted for approval and that record is approved, rejected, or recalled. | |
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| Step 1: Create an Approval Process | |
| Step 1: Create an Approval Process | |
| To create an approval process, you start in Setup. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Approval Processes in the Quick Find box, then select Approval Processes. | |
| 2. | |
| In the Manage Approval Process For drop-down list, choose Line Item. | |
| 3. Click Create New Approval Process and then Use Jump Start Wizard. | |
| 4. | |
| In the Name field, enter Approve Unit Price Change | |
| 5. Click the drop-down list next to Use this approval process if the following, and choose Formula | |
| evaluates to true. | |
| 6. | |
| In the formula field, click Insert Field, select Line Item > and then select Unit Price. Click Insert. | |
| 7. Click Insert Operator and select <> Not Equal. | |
| 8. Click Insert Field, select Line Item >, select Merchandise > and then Price. Click Insert. Before moving on, make | |
| sure your screen looks like: | |
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| Step 2: Examine the Approval Process Detail Page | |
| 9. Now you need to assign the approval to someone. For large companies where multiple people could have the ability to grant | |
| approval, you might assign this to a queue. In DE orgs there are only two users, so click the option for Automatically assign | |
| to approvers and choose Admin User. (If you’ve edited your profile, this will be your name, note that you may need to click | |
| the lookup icon if you don't’s see your name listed.) | |
| 10. Make sure your screen looks like this and then Save your work. | |
| 11. Click OK in the pop-up, and then click View Approval Process Detail Page. | |
| Step 2: Examine the Approval Process Detail Page | |
| The detail page of the approval process has a lot going on, and it's worth a minute to explore the user interface. | |
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| Step 3: Modify Approval Process Actions | |
| 1. Edit every step of an approval process. | |
| 2. Clone or delete an approval process. | |
| 3. Activate and deactivate an approval process. | |
| 4. View an approval process diagram as a flow chart. | |
| 5. View general details of the approval process. | |
| In addition, you can add new steps and actions (email alerts, field updates, and outbound messages) wherever you want. | |
| Step 3: Modify Approval Process Actions | |
| In this step you modify the approval process so that if the price change is rejected, the price reverts back. | |
| 1. | |
| In the Final Approval Actions section, click Edit next to Record Lock. | |
| 2. Choose Unlock the record for editing, and then click Save. | |
| 3. | |
| 4. | |
| 5. | |
| In the Final Rejection Actions section, click Add New and choose Field Update. | |
| In the Name field, enter Reset Price. | |
| In Field to Update, choose Unit Price. | |
| 6. Select Use a formula to set the new value. | |
| 7. Click Show Formula Editor. | |
| 8. Use the Formula Editor to select Line Item >, then Merchandise >, then Price. | |
| 9. Click Insert, and then click Save. | |
| Step 4: Activate the Approval Process | |
| Just like with workflow rules, you must activate an approval process before you can use it. This might seem like an unnecessary step | |
| until you think about situations where you might not want an approval process to run. For example, let's say you want to run a special | |
| promotion and decrease the price of a certain laptop in all open invoices. This would fire off the approval process for every open invoice, | |
| creating a bottleneck to getting orders out the door. In a case like this, you'd want to deactivate the approval process before running | |
| the batch update. When you're finished, you'd activate the approval process again. | |
| 1. Click Activate and then click OK in the pop-up. | |
| 2. While you’re on the detail page, click View Diagram to get a visual representation of your approval process. You can click any of | |
| the nodes to get more information. | |
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| Step 5: Try Out the App | |
| Before you can see how the approval process works, you need to make sure that your users will be able to submit the relevant records | |
| for approval. Otherwise, the approval process will never start! In this step, you add the Submit for Approval button to the Line Item page | |
| layout. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Objects in the Quick Find box, then select Objects, and click Line Item. | |
| 2. | |
| In the Page Layouts related list, click Edit next to Line Item Layout. | |
| 3. From the Buttons category in the palette, drag the Submit for Approval button to the Standard Buttons area. | |
| 4. Click Save. | |
| Now all users assigned to this page layout will be able to submit line items for approval. | |
| Step 5: Try Out the App | |
| Now it's time to try out the new approval process and simulate the workflow as both the submitter and approver of a change. | |
| 1. Click the Invoices tab, and choose an existing invoice. | |
| 2. Add a new item to the invoice. | |
| 3. Click Edit next to the new line item, reduce the value for Unit Price, and then click Save. | |
| 4. Click Submit for Approval and OK. | |
| 5. Notice that the record is locked, you get a default email, and in the Approval History related list the overall status is Pending. | |
| 6. Click the link you received in your email, add a comment, and then click Approve. Notice the record is unlocked and the overall | |
| status is Approved. | |
| 7. Repeat steps 1-6, but this time reject the price change. Notice that Unit Price reverts to the default merchandise price. | |
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| Step 6: Configure Approvals for Chatter and Salesforce1 | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| Approval processes are automatically included on your Home tab. If you click the Home tab, you can see the items you need to approve | |
| and reject right there. | |
| Step 6: Configure Approvals for Chatter and Salesforce1 | |
| Approval processes have built-in support for Chatter posts, which means they can also show up on your mobile device. | |
| 1. | |
| In Setup, enter “Chatter Settings” in the Quick Find box, then select Chatter Settings. | |
| 2. Click Edit. | |
| 3. Select Allow Approvals, and then click Save. | |
| Approval feed items will now show up on your users’ Chatter feed on the full site and in Salesforce1. | |
| Create a Flow | |
| Note: Visual Workflow isn’t supported in Salesforce1. | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 15–20 minutes | |
| Visual Workflow enables you to build applications, known as flows, to guide users through screens for collecting and updating data. You | |
| can visually build flows using the drag-and-drop user interface of the Cloud Flow Designer. No coding required! | |
| In this tutorial, we’ll create a simple flow that does the following each time it runs: | |
| • Prompt the user for the line item information. | |
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| Step 1: Add Flow Variables | |
| • Create the line item record for the invoice. | |
| • Reduce the quantity of merchandise in stock by the quantity ordered in the line item. | |
| Step 1: Add Flow Variables | |
| You can use flow variables to store data that can be used throughout the flow and referenced as values for updating record fields. In | |
| this tutorial, we’ll create two flow variables. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Flows in the Quick Find box, then select Flows. | |
| 2. Click New Flow. | |
| If prompted, activate the Adobe® Flash® plug-in. | |
| 3. Create the first variable. | |
| a. From the Resources tab, double-click Variable. | |
| b. Configure the variable as follows. | |
| Field | |
| Value | |
| Unique Name | |
| vQuantityAvailable | |
| Description | |
| Quantity of merchandise in stock. | |
| Data Type | |
| Number | |
| Scale | |
| 0 | |
| c. Click OK. | |
| 4. Create the second variable. | |
| a. From the Resources tab, double-click Variable. | |
| b. Configure the variable as follows. | |
| Field | |
| Value | |
| Unique Name | |
| vInvoiceId | |
| Description | |
| ID of the invoice to which the flow adds the new line item. A | |
| custom button on the Invoice detail page launches the flow and | |
| passes the invoice ID into this variable. | |
| Data Type | |
| Text | |
| Input and Output | |
| Input Only | |
| This option lets the variable be set when the flow is launched by a custom button. | |
| c. Click OK. | |
| 5. Click Explorer to verify the variables are saved. | |
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| Step 2: Add a Form Screen | |
| 6. Save the flow. | |
| a. Click Save. | |
| b. For Name, enter Add Line Item from Invoice and Update Stock Quantity. | |
| Unique Name is automatically populated based on this entry. | |
| c. For Type, select Flow. | |
| d. Click OK. | |
| Ignore any activation warnings for now. | |
| Step 2: Add a Form Screen | |
| A screen can use form-style fields to gather data—in this case, line item information—from the flow user. | |
| 1. From the Palette tab, drag the Screen onto the canvas. | |
| The Screen overlay opens with the General Info tab selected. | |
| 2. For the Name, enter Get Line Item Info From User. | |
| Unique Name is automatically populated based on this entry. | |
| 3. Add a field for the Line Item Number. | |
| a. From the Add a Field tab, double-click Textbox. | |
| A textbox field appears in the preview pane on the right side of the Screen overlay. | |
| b. Click [Textbox] in the preview pane. | |
| c. On the Field Settings tab, configure the field as follows. | |
| Field | |
| Label | |
| Value | |
| Line Item Number | |
| Unique Name is automatically populated based on this entry. | |
| Default Value | |
| 1 | |
| 4. Add a field for the Merchandise. | |
| a. From the Add a Field tab, double-click Dropdown List. | |
| A drop-down list field appears in the preview pane. | |
| b. Click [Dropdown List] in the preview pane. | |
| c. On the Field Settings tab, configure the field as follows. | |
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| Step 2: Add a Form Screen | |
| Field | |
| Label | |
| Value | |
| Merchandise | |
| Unique Name is automatically populated based on this entry. | |
| Value Data Type | |
| Text | |
| d. | |
| In the Choice Settings section, click the drop-down arrow then CREATE NEW > Dynamic Record Choice. | |
| The Dynamic Record Choice overlay appears. | |
| 5. Create the dynamic record choice resource, which at runtime dynamically populates the Merchandise field with choice options, | |
| each of which represents a Merchandise record in the database. | |
| a. Enter the following values. | |
| Field | |
| Value | |
| Unique Name | |
| dcMerchandise | |
| Value Data Type | |
| Text | |
| Create a choice for | |
| each | |
| Merchandise__c | |
| b. Set the filter criteria so that the dynamic record choice returns only the merchandise that have items in stock. | |
| Field | |
| Field | |
| Value | |
| Quantity__c | |
| Operator | |
| greater than | |
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| Step 2: Add a Form Screen | |
| Field | |
| Value | |
| Value | |
| 0 | |
| c. Set the following fields so that the choices are displayed using the Name in each Merchandise record, sorted in alphabetical | |
| order. Also, we want the choice to store the ID of the user-selected Merchandise record. | |
| Field | |
| Choice Label | |
| Value | |
| Name | |
| Choice Stored Value | |
| Id | |
| Sort Results by | |
| Name | |
| Ascending | |
| d. Save the quantity in stock from the user-selected merchandise record to the flow variable we already created. | |
| Field | |
| Field | |
| Value | |
| Quantity__c | |
| Variable | |
| {!vQuantityAvailable} | |
| e. Click OK. | |
| The Dynamic Record Choice overlay closes, and the Screen overlay appears. | |
| 6. Add a field to capture the quantity ordered in the line item. | |
| a. From the Add a Field tab, double-click Number. | |
| A number field appears in the preview pane on the right side of the Screen overlay. | |
| b. Click [Number] in the preview pane. | |
| c. On the Field Settings tab, configure the field as follows. | |
| Field | |
| Label | |
| Value | |
| Quantity Ordered | |
| Unique Name is automatically populated based on this entry. | |
| Scale | |
| 0 | |
| 7. Add a field to capture the unit price of the merchandise. | |
| a. From the Add a Field tab, double-click Currency. | |
| b. Click [Currency] in the preview pane. | |
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| Step 3: Add a Record Create Element | |
| c. On the Field Settings tab, configure the field as follows. | |
| Field | |
| Label | |
| Value | |
| Unit Price | |
| Unique Name is automatically populated based on this entry. | |
| Scale | |
| 2 | |
| The preview pane on the Screen overlay should now include four fields. | |
| 8. Click OK. | |
| 9. Save the flow. | |
| a. Click Save. | |
| b. | |
| Ignore the activation warnings for now. | |
| c. Click OK. | |
| Step 3: Add a Record Create Element | |
| Now that the flow can contain all the data required to create a Line Item record, let’s add a Record Create element to do just that. | |
| 1. From the Palette tab, drag the Record Create onto the canvas. | |
| 2. For the Name, enter Create Line Item. | |
| Unique Name is automatically populated based on this entry. | |
| 3. For the Create field, enter Line_Item__c. | |
| 4. Set the fields in the record using values from flow variables and screen fields. | |
| a. Click Add Row until you have five assignment rows. | |
| b. Set the fields and values as follows. | |
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| Step 4: Add a Record Update Element | |
| Field | |
| Value | |
| Invoice__c | |
| {!vInvoiceId} | |
| Merchandise__c | |
| {!Merchandise} | |
| Name | |
| {!Line_Item_Number} | |
| Quantity__c | |
| {!Quantity_Ordered} | |
| Unit_Price__c | |
| {!Unit_Price} | |
| 5. Click OK. | |
| The Screen and Record Create elements now appear on the canvas. | |
| 6. Connect the two elements by dragging the node at the bottom of the Screen element onto the Record Create element. | |
| The node doesn’t move, but a connector line appears as you drag from one node to another element. | |
| 7. Hover over the Screen element and click | |
| . | |
| This identifies which element to execute first when the flow runs. | |
| 8. You can drag the elements to position them as you wish. | |
| What really matters is that the connectors link the elements together so that the flow executes them in the correct order, starting | |
| with the identified start element. | |
| 9. Click Save. | |
| Notice that the activation warnings no longer appear because we set the start element and linked the elements together. | |
| Step 4: Add a Record Update Element | |
| Now let’s add a Record Update element to update the relevant Merchandise record, reducing the quantity available by the quantity | |
| ordered in the line item. | |
| 1. From the Palette tab, drag the Record Update onto the canvas. | |
| 2. For the Name, enter Decrement Available Stock. | |
| Unique Name is automatically populated based on this entry. | |
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| Add App Logic with Clicks, Not Code | |
| Step 4: Add a Record Update Element | |
| 3. For the Update field, enter Merchandise__c. | |
| 4. Set the filter criteria so that the flow updates only the Merchandise record associated with the line item. | |
| Field | |
| Field | |
| Operator | |
| Value | |
| Value | |
| Id | |
| equals | |
| {!Merchandise} | |
| 5. | |
| 6. | |
| In the Field column for updating record fields, enter Quantity__c. | |
| In the Value column, click the arrow and select CREATE NEW > Formula. | |
| 7. Configure the formula to subtract the quantity ordered in the line item from the quantity of Merchandise. | |
| Field | |
| Value | |
| Unique Name | |
| fDecrementAvailableStock | |
| Value Data Type | |
| Number | |
| Scale | |
| 0 | |
| Formula text box | |
| {!vQuantityAvailable} - {!Quantity_Ordered} | |
| 8. Click OK. | |
| The Formula overlay closes, and the Record Update overlay appears. | |
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| Step 5: Add a Confirmation Screen | |
| 9. Click OK. | |
| 10. Drag the node from the bottom of the Record Create element onto the Record Update element to connect them. | |
| 11. Click Save. | |
| Step 5: Add a Confirmation Screen | |
| The flow is complete enough to do the job, but let’s add a screen to let the flow user know that the flow has finished. | |
| 1. From the Palette tab, drag the Screen onto the canvas. | |
| The Screen overlay opens with the General Info tab selected. | |
| 2. For the Name, enter Done. | |
| Unique Name is automatically populated based on this entry. | |
| 3. From the Add a Field tab, double-click Display Text. | |
| 4. Click [Display Text] in the preview pane. | |
| 5. On the Field Settings tab, configure the field as follows. | |
| Field | |
| Value | |
| Unique Name | |
| confirmation_message | |
| text box | |
| Thank you. | |
| Your line item has been added to the invoice, and the available | |
| quantity of merchandise has been updated. | |
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| Step 5: Add a Confirmation Screen | |
| 6. Click OK. | |
| 7. Drag the node from the bottom of the Record Update element onto the new Screen element to connect them. | |
| 8. Click Save. | |
| 9. Click Close. | |
| The flow detail page displays the flow URL. You’ll need this later when you create the custom button for launching this flow. | |
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| Add App Logic with Clicks, Not Code | |
| Step 6: Add a Custom Button | |
| Step 6: Add a Custom Button | |
| Now that we have a flow, let’s add a custom button so that users can launch the flow from the invoice detail page. The button will: | |
| • Launch the flow specified by the flow URL. You can find the flow URL on the flow detail page. | |
| • Pass the relevant invoice ID into a flow variable. | |
| • Set the flow finish behavior so that when the flow user clicks Finish, the browser returns the user to the relevant invoice detail page. | |
| 1. Create the custom button for the Line Item custom object. | |
| a. From Setup, enter Objects in the Quick Find box, select Objects, then select Line Item. | |
| b. | |
| In the Buttons, Links, and Actions related list, click New Button or Link. | |
| c. Define the custom button. | |
| Field | |
| Label | |
| Value | |
| Add Line Item and Update Stock Qty | |
| The Name is automatically populated based on this entry. | |
| Display Type | |
| List Button | |
| Behavior | |
| Display in existing window without sidebar or header | |
| Content Source | |
| URL | |
| URL text box | |
| /flow/Add_Line_Item_from_Invoice_and_Update_Stock_Quantity | |
| ?vInvoiceId={!Invoice__c.Id}&retURL=/{!Invoice__c.Id} | |
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| Step 6: Add a Custom Button | |
| d. Click Save. | |
| e. Click OK. | |
| 2. Add the custom button to the Invoice page layout. | |
| a. From Setup, enter Objects in the Quick Find box, select Objects, then select Invoice. | |
| b. | |
| In the Page Layouts related list, click Edit for the Invoice Layout. | |
| c. Click | |
| for the Line Items related list. | |
| d. Expand the Buttons section. | |
| e. Under Available Buttons, select Add Line Item and Update Stock Qty. | |
| f. Click | |
| . | |
| The button name now appears under Selected Buttons. | |
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| Add App Logic with Clicks, Not Code | |
| Step 7: Try Out the App | |
| g. Click OK. | |
| 3. Verify that the button appears in the preview area for the Line Items related list. | |
| 4. Click Save. | |
| Step 7: Try Out the App | |
| Now try out the revised app and see the flow in action. | |
| 1. To make sure you get real results when you try the app, configure an existing Merchandise record to have a known starting quantity. | |
| a. Click the Merchandise tab. | |
| b. Click Desktop. | |
| c. Click Edit. | |
| d. Set the Quantity to 1000. | |
| e. Click Save. | |
| Now when we try out the flow, we can easily verify that the merchandise quantity is updated correctly. | |
| 2. Click the Invoices tab and either create a new invoice or edit an existing one. | |
| 3. Click the Add Line Item and Update Stock Qty custom button you just created. | |
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| Add App Logic with Clicks, Not Code | |
| Step 7: Try Out the App | |
| 4. To see results on the invoice detail page, enter the following values for the line item. | |
| Field | |
| Value | |
| Line Item Number | |
| 11 | |
| Merchandise | |
| Desktop | |
| Quantity Ordered | |
| 100 | |
| Unit Price | |
| 1000 | |
| 5. Click Next and then Finish. | |
| 6. Verify that the line item correctly appears on the invoice detail page. | |
| 7. Click the Merchandise tab. | |
| 8. Click Desktop. | |
| 9. Verify that the Quantity changed from 1000 to 900. | |
| Congratulations! You’ve successfully updated your inventory. But what happens if an error occurs? The standard behavior is for the flow | |
| to email the organization administrator a generic message, but you can modify the flow to also immediately notify the user. This is | |
| covered in the next, optional, tutorial. | |
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| Add App Logic with Clicks, Not Code | |
| Step 8: Add a Fault Screen | |
| Step 8: Add a Fault Screen | |
| If an error occurs while the flow is interacting with the database, the flow displays a generic unhandled fault message. The system sends | |
| the organization administrator an email with information to help identify the issue. You can also set up fault paths to a screen that | |
| displays this information to the flow user. Instead of waiting for a system message to reach your email account, you can view the | |
| information in the flow and immediately fix the problem. | |
| 1. Reopen the flow if necessary. | |
| 2. From the Palette tab, drag the Screen onto the canvas. | |
| The Screen overlay opens with the General Info tab selected. | |
| 3. For the Name, enter Fault Screen. | |
| Unique Name is automatically populated based on this entry. | |
| 4. From the Add a Field tab, double-click Display Text. | |
| 5. Click [Display Text] in the preview pane. | |
| 6. On the Field Settings tab, configure the field as follows. | |
| Field | |
| Value | |
| Unique Name | |
| fault_message | |
| text box | |
| Sorry, an error occurred in the flow. | |
| For help, provide your flow administrator with the following | |
| information: {!$Flow.FaultMessage} | |
| 7. Click OK. | |
| 8. Connect both the Record Create and Record Update elements to the fault screen. | |
| a. Drag the node from the bottom of the Record Create element onto the new Screen element. | |
| b. Drag the node from the bottom of the Record Update element onto the new Screen element. | |
| Notice that these new connectors have “FAULT” labels. | |
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| Add App Logic with Clicks, Not Code | |
| Step 8: Add a Fault Screen | |
| 9. Click Save. | |
| 10. Click Close. | |
| Now, if the flow encounters a validation rule or error, the flow user sees a meaningful error message instead of the generic unhandled | |
| fault message. | |
| If your flow is already working fine, you can still test the fault screen by entering a value that would fail the validation rule you created | |
| in an earlier tutorial. Specifically, while running the flow, enter a Quantity Ordered value that’s obviously greater than the quantity | |
| available for the merchandise. | |
| 78 | |
| ANALYZE DATA WITH REPORTS AND DASHBOARDS | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 30–40 minutes | |
| How great would it be to get a report in your inbox every morning that tells you how much stock you have for each item in your | |
| warehouse? Or perhaps you’d like to see that information displayed as a graphical chart whenever you access the app on your phone? | |
| This series of tutorials introduces you to reports and dashboards, or what we refer to as Salesforce Reports and Dashboards. Once you’ve | |
| defined your reports, you can place them on a dashboard, so you can see all your key metrics at a glance. Salesforce Reports and | |
| Dashboards lets you see what’s important to you, exactly how and where you want to see it. | |
| Create a Report | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 15 minutes | |
| The Warehouse app you created with the App Quick Start wizard includes a Reports tab, where you can create, edit, run, and schedule | |
| reports. Start by creating a simple report that tells you how much stock you have for each item in your warehouse. Then you’ll use | |
| groupings and filters to get the most out of the data in your report. | |
| Try out buckets for on-the-fly grouping, and experiment with showing your report data graphically as a chart. And once you’ve got charts | |
| mastered, take a look at how you can provide users with valuable context by embedding charts in record detail pages. | |
| Step 1: Create a Simple Report | |
| In this step, you create a simple tabular report that shows the merchandise in your warehouse and how many pieces of each are in stock. | |
| Tabular reports present data in simple rows and columns, much like a spreadsheet. They can be used to show column summaries, like | |
| sum, average, maximum, and minimum. | |
| 1. From the Reports tab, click New Report. | |
| 2. | |
| In the Quick Find box, enter Merchandise, and in the Other Reports folder, choose Merchandise. | |
| 3. Click Create. | |
| 4. | |
| In the report builder, notice that the Merchandise Name field is already there. You only need one more field: the quantity of | |
| each item. From the Fields pane, drag Quantity onto the preview. | |
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| Analyze Data with Reports and Dashboards | |
| Step 1: Create a Simple Report | |
| 5. Click Save, and give your report a meaningful name, such as Merchandise in Stock. | |
| 6. | |
| In the Report Folder drop-down list, select Unfiled Public Reports, so everyone can access it. (If you didn’t want this report to be | |
| accessible to everyone, you’d create a folder and give different people different levels of access to it. More on that later.) | |
| 7. Click Save and Run Report. | |
| That’s it. Your new report is ready to go! | |
| You can get fancy with reports, but that's all you need from this one. And as you'll soon see, even this simple report gives you a lot of | |
| functionality. | |
| • Use the Summarize Information by drop-down list to summarize the report based on any field on the Merchandise object. For | |
| example, you could summarize on Owner Name to see who entered each piece of merchandise, as well as the count. | |
| • Use the Show drop-down list specify whether you want to see just your merchandise, your team's merchandise, or all merchandise. | |
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| Analyze Data with Reports and Dashboards | |
| Step 2: Get More Information Out of Your Report | |
| • In the Time Frame section, you can choose to run this report based on the created, modified, or last activity date, as well as choose | |
| the date range for the data you want to see. | |
| • Click Run Report, and choose to run the report now or on some future date. If you choose the latter, it takes only a few more clicks | |
| to have that report in your inbox every day—or however often you want it. | |
| • If you’d rather see a summary than a bunch of details, click Hide Details. | |
| • Click Customize to make changes to the report, and you'll return to the familiar drag-and-drop interface you used to create the | |
| report. | |
| • And finally, you can export the report as a printed document, spreadsheet, or CSV file by clicking Export Details. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| • Click the column headers to toggle between ascending and descending order. The Grand Totals indicates the record count as well | |
| as the summaries you chose. Click Customize to make additional changes to this report. | |
| • You can click through to the data records that are being reported on, a characteristic found in all reports on Salesforce. For example, | |
| click the name of any merchandise record listed in the report to view its detail page. | |
| • A report folder's sharing settings determine who can do what with reports in that folder. Click | |
| next to the folder in the Reports | |
| tab and click Share. You can give people three levels of access: Viewer, Editor, or Manager. For more information, see “Share a Report | |
| or Dashboard Folder” in the Salesforce Help. | |
| Step 2: Get More Information Out of Your Report | |
| The report builder gives you a lot of ways to view your data. Viewing data in groups usually helps make sense of what you’re looking at. | |
| In this case, grouping by item, price, or total units sold can be helpful. | |
| First we’ll turn our simple tabular report into a slightly fancier summary report, and then we’ll give it a grouping. | |
| 1. Click Customize. | |
| 2. The default format is tabular, but we want a summary report. Click Tabular Format and choose Summary instead. | |
| 3. Find and drag the Price field to your report. | |
| 4. Click | |
| 5. Click | |
| next to Price, click Summarize this Field, select Average, and then click Apply. | |
| next to Quantity, click Summarize this Field, select Sum, and then click Apply. | |
| 6. Select the Merchandise Name field (either from Fields or Preview panel) and drag it to the area labeled Drop a field here to | |
| create a grouping. This aggregates data by the unique merchandise item. | |
| The report is now grouped by merchandise, and it includes the sum of quantity and the average price for each level. | |
| Tell Me More... | |
| Try adding a cross filter from the Add drop-down list in the Filters pane. A cross filter lets you filter on the report's child objects using a | |
| simple with or without condition. To learn more about cross filters, watch Using Cross Filters in Reports. | |
| Step 3: Add Buckets to Your Report | |
| Bucketing lets you quickly group report records without creating a formula or a custom field. For example, say you also want to group | |
| by quantity into ranges. To do this, create a bucket field on Quantity and define the ranges. | |
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| Analyze Data with Reports and Dashboards | |
| Step 3: Add Buckets to Your Report | |
| First, create a bucket field based on Quantity with ranges for small, medium, and large. You'll use the bucket field to create the | |
| grouping. | |
| 1. Click | |
| on Quantity and click Bucket this Field. | |
| 2. Enter a bucket field name, Quantity Range. | |
| 3. Define ranges as Small (500), Medium (between 500–1000), and Large (greater than 1000). | |
| 4. Click OK. | |
| 5. Grab the Quantity Range bucket field that's already on the report and make it the first-level grouping by dragging it onto the drop | |
| zone above Merchandise Name. | |
| Now the report shows data grouped in two levels—first, by quantity range (small, medium or large), and second, by merchandise name. | |
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| Analyze Data with Reports and Dashboards | |
| Step 4: Show Your Report Data as a Chart | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| You can filter a bucket field just like other fields in the report. For example, set a filter for Quantity Range not equal to | |
| Small to see only merchandise with quantities in the medium or large range. | |
| To learn more about bucket fields, watch Getting Started with Buckets. | |
| Step 4: Show Your Report Data as a Chart | |
| It’s often a good idea to give users a visual way to understand the data in your report. Let's add a combination chart to our report now. | |
| 1. | |
| 2. | |
| 3. | |
| In the Preview pane, click Add Chart to create a chart to represent your data. In the Chart Editor that appears, click the vertical bar | |
| chart. | |
| In the Y-Axis drop-down list, leave Sum of Quantity selected. | |
| In the X-Axis drop-down list, select Merchandise: Merchandise Name. Notice the bucket field, Quantity Range, is also available, as | |
| there are two groupings. | |
| 4. Select Plot additional values. | |
| 5. | |
| In the Display drop-down list, select Line. | |
| 6. Select Use second axis. | |
| 7. | |
| In the Value drop-down list, select Average of Price. | |
| 8. Click OK, then Save. | |
| The combination chart shows merchandise in stock (bars) against average price (line). | |
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| Step 5: Embed the Report Chart in a Record Page | |
| Step 5: Embed the Report Chart in a Record Page | |
| There are many ways to share reports once you’ve created them. One of the best is to embed the report’s chart on a record detail page, | |
| where users can see it as they do their work: no need to jump over to the Reports tab. In Modify a Page Layout on page 32, you learned | |
| how to customize what's on the detail page for a particular type of record. Now we’ll do that for merchandise records. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Objects in the Quick Find box, then select Objects, then choose Merchandise. | |
| 2. Under the Page Layouts related list, click Edit next to Merchandise Layout. | |
| 3. Click Report Charts in the palette. | |
| 4. Drag the Section element onto the preview pane and place it above the Mobile Cards area. Enter Charts for the section name, | |
| and select 1-column for the layout. | |
| 5. | |
| In the Quick Find box, type the name of the report and click | |
| You can browse up to 200 recently viewed reports. But you only see reports that already have charts. | |
| to find and select the report chart. (You can add two if you want.) | |
| 6. Drag the Merchandise In Stock report chart onto the layout. | |
| 7. Click Save and go look at a merchandise record. It will look something like: | |
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| Analyze Data with Reports and Dashboards | |
| Create a Dashboard | |
| Now users can quickly see how much merchandise is in stock, without leaving their record detail page! Notice that, by default, the chart | |
| is automatically filtered to show data that’s relevant to the particular record type you’re looking at. You can set different filters back on | |
| the page layout. Just click | |
| on the chart to customize it. | |
| To learn more about embedding report charts on record pages, watch Embedding Charts Anywhere. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| Salesforce provides the Reports and Dashboards REST API that lets you access your data remotely and build your own apps and | |
| visualizations. There’s an API resource for almost anything you can do with reports through the standard web interface. For example, | |
| say you’ve used Visualforce to build a custom app, and you want to give that app a Reports tab. Or your users need a special kind of | |
| chart that isn’t one of the out-of-the-box report builder options. | |
| For a quick start on using the Reports and Dashboards REST API, see the Salesforce Reports and Dashboards REST API Developer Guide. | |
| Create a Dashboard | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 15 minutes | |
| Dashboards in Salesforce are like a dashboard in your car, showing you important information at a glance. Dashboards can show data | |
| in charts, gauges, tables, metrics, or Visualforce pages. Naturally, you can customize dashboards to show exactly what you want. | |
| In this tutorial, you create a new dashboard that's powered by the report you created in the previous tutorial. | |
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| Analyze Data with Reports and Dashboards | |
| Step 1: Create a New Dashboard | |
| Step 1: Create a New Dashboard | |
| Create a new dashboard for the Warehouse app that's powered by the Merchandise in Stock report that you’ve created. | |
| 1. Click the Reports tab and then New Dashboard. | |
| 2. Click the editor's Components tab, then drag the Vertical Bar Chart component and drop it in the first column of the new dashboard. | |
| 3. Now click the editor's Data Sources tab, and under Reports > Unfiled Public Reports, drag your report and drop it on top of the | |
| new Vertical Bar Chart component that's in the dashboard. | |
| Step 2: Add a Pie Chart Component | |
| That was so easy. Why not play around with adding a different type of dashboard component, just for fun? | |
| 1. Repeat the previous steps, but this time use a Pie Chart component in the second column. | |
| 2. Then click Remove this column ( | |
| ) in the header of the third column to remove the unused third column from the layout. When | |
| you are finished, the dashboard preview should look similar to the following. | |
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| Analyze Data with Reports and Dashboards | |
| Step 3: Try Out the App | |
| 3. Click Save, name the dashboard Merchandise Overview, and click Save. | |
| Step 3: Try Out the App | |
| 1. Close the editor, and in the pop-up dialog, choose Save and Close. The dashboard then runs automatically when you leave the | |
| editor. Your dashboard should look similar to the following image. | |
| 2. To access the dashboard at any time, click the Reports or Dashboard tab in the Warehouse app. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| • When you set a running user for a dashboard, it runs using the security settings of that single, specific user. All users with access to | |
| the dashboard see the same data, regardless of their own personal security settings. To set the running user, click | |
| View dashboard as field. | |
| next to the | |
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| Analyze Data with Reports and Dashboards | |
| Step 4: Access Dashboards from Your Mobile App | |
| • Dashboards can be updated either manually or on a schedule, and they can be delivered through email and mobile. | |
| • A dashboard won't automatically refresh unless it is set to do so. Each time you view a dashboard, it indicates in the upper-right | |
| corner when it was last refreshed. To update the data in the dashboard, click Refresh. | |
| • Try adding a filter when editing the dashboard by clicking Add Filter. A filter lets you see different views of dashboard data based | |
| on filter conditions. You can add up to three filters per dashboard with up to ten conditions on a filter. Instead of filtering at the | |
| report level, you directly manipulate dashboard data. | |
| Step 4: Access Dashboards from Your Mobile App | |
| Mobile dashboards give you the fastest and clearest way to see what’s important to you at a glance, on the go. | |
| 1. | |
| In Salesforce1, tap | |
| to open the navigation menu. | |
| 2. Tap Dashboards, and from the list of recent dashboards, tap Merchandise Overview. | |
| 3. Dashboards look and navigate a bit different on a mobile device. To switch columns, swipe left and right. | |
| 4. Tap a component to see the details of a component. | |
| 5. | |
| In the component view, tap data points to see their values highlighted. | |
| Unleash Your Reports with the Salesforce Reports and Dashboards | |
| REST API | |
| Level: Intermediate; Duration: 40 minutes | |
| You’ve learned how to do some pretty sophisticated things with reports in this workbook so far. But what if you need more? What if | |
| your users can’t live without a custom app specially tailored to their own unique business requirements? | |
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| Unleash Your Reports with the Salesforce Reports and | |
| Dashboards REST API | |
| No problem! If you can code a little, or have access to someone who can, Salesforce provides an API that can handle almost anything | |
| you can do with reports through the standard web interface. | |
| For example, say you’ve used Visualforce to build a custom app, and you want that app to display report data. Or your users need a | |
| special kind of chart that isn’t one of the out-of-the-box options when they build a dashboard. In this tutorial, we’ll take a look at some | |
| ways you might give your users what they want. | |
| Note: This is just a brief overview to show you some of the cool kinds of things you can do with the Salesforce Reports and | |
| Dashboards REST API. For full instructions and a detailed reference, check out the Salesforce Reports and Dashboards REST API | |
| Developer Guide. | |
| To use the API, you have your app send a request to a URL that’s based on the instance where your Salesforce organization is running. | |
| For example, if your organization is hosted on na1.salesforce.com, you could get a list of all the reports you have by sending | |
| a request to https://na1.salesforce.com/analytics/reports. | |
| Here are the basic operations you can undertake with the Salesforce Reports and Dashboards REST API. We’ll be using some of these in | |
| the next few steps. | |
| Action | |
| URL | |
| List all recently used, supported | |
| reports. | |
| Retrieve report, report type, and | |
| related metadata for the specified | |
| report. | |
| /analytics/reports | |
| /analytics/reports/<reportId>/describe | |
| Run the specified report. | |
| /analytics/reports/<reportId> | |
| /analytics/reports/<reportId> | |
| Run the specified report with | |
| dynamic filters. | |
| Run the specified report | |
| asynchronously. | |
| Run the specified report | |
| asynchronously with filters. | |
| List the 200 most recent run | |
| instances of the specified report. | |
| Fetch the specified run instance of | |
| the specified report. | |
| Get a list of recently used | |
| dashboards. | |
| Retrieve metadata, data, and status | |
| for the specified dashboard. | |
| /analytics/reports/<reportId>/instances | |
| POST | |
| N/A | |
| /analytics/reports/<reportId>/instances | |
| POST | |
| /analytics/reports/<reportId>/instances | |
| GET | |
| /analytics/reports/<reportId>/instances/<instanceId> | |
| GET | |
| /analytics/dashboards | |
| /analytics/dashboards/<dashboardID> | |
| Method | |
| Request | |
| Body | |
| GET | |
| GET | |
| GET | |
| POST | |
| N/A | |
| N/A | |
| N/A | |
| Report | |
| Metadata | |
| Report | |
| Metadata | |
| N/A | |
| N/A | |
| N/A | |
| N/A | |
| N/A | |
| N/A | |
| GET | |
| GET | |
| PUT | |
| GET | |
| Trigger a dashboard refresh. | |
| /analytics/dashboards/<dashboardID> | |
| Get the status for the specified | |
| dashboard. | |
| /analytics/dashboards/<dashboardID>/status | |
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| Analyze Data with Reports and Dashboards | |
| Step 1: Run a Report Synchronously | |
| All Salesforce Reports and Dashboards REST API resources are accessed using: | |
| • A base URI for your company (for example, https://na1.salesforce.com) | |
| • Version information (for example /services/data/v29.0/analytics) | |
| • A named resource (for example, /reports) | |
| Put together, an example of the full URL to the resource is: | |
| https://na1.salesforce.com/services/data/v29.0/analytics/reports/ | |
| Step 1: Run a Report Synchronously | |
| If speed is what you need, synchronous execution is the way to go. Your report runs afresh every time the user looks at it, and feeds it | |
| right back to your app. If your users need to track hour-by-hour changes, you may want to run your report synchronously. | |
| Let’s get acquainted with the Salesforce Reports and Dashboards REST API by running our Merchandise report. We’ll run it synchronously | |
| this time, and without any filters. | |
| • Kick off the report by sending a GET command with the ID of the report you want to run. | |
| The command will look like this: | |
| curl -s -H 'Authorization: OAuth token ...' | |
| https://na1.salesforce.com/services/data/v29.0/analytics/reports/00OD0000001ZbP7MAK | |
| Note: We’re using NA1 as the instance for this example. Substitute the instance where your Salesforce organization is hosted. | |
| You've just run your first report via the API! Don't worry about reading the results yet. You'll get to that in the next few pages. | |
| Step 2: Run a Report Asynchronously | |
| Running a report asynchronously means sending the request, then getting the results back at some later time. There are a few advantages | |
| to running reports asynchronously through the API. | |
| • When you run asynchronously, the results are kept around in a cache that you can use any time during the next 24 hours. And the | |
| API commands for reusing cached results don’t count against the 1200-requests-per-hour limit. (General API request limits still count, | |
| though.) | |
| • Asynchronous reports have a longer time-out interval. So if you know your report is looking at a very large data set and you don’t | |
| want to risk timing out, you might want to run asynchronously. | |
| • You can run up to 1200 asynchronous reports per hour, which is over twice the limit for synchronous reports. So if you expect a lot | |
| of users to be looking at your app, asynchronous runs might be for you. | |
| 1. Kick off your asynchronous report by sending a POST command to | |
| https://<instance>//analytics/reports/<reportId>/instances. | |
| The command will look like: | |
| curl -s -H 'Authorization: OAuth token ...' | |
| https://na1.salesforce.com/services/data/v29.0/analytics/reports/00OD0000001ZbP7MAK/instances | |
| -X POST -d '' | |
| 2. To get the results of your asynchronous run, poll the report run instance with GET. | |
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| Step 3: Filter Report Data | |
| A specific asynchronous run of a report is called an instance. Each instance has an ID. To get the data set that an instance contains, | |
| you send a request to the system, identifying the instance you want by its ID. This is called polling the instance. If the report has | |
| finished running, the response to your poll request is the data set you asked for. (If it’s not finished, you get an “in progress” response.) | |
| curl -s -H 'Authorization: OAuth token ...' | |
| https://na1.salesforce.com/services/data/v29.0/analytics/reports/00OD0000001ZbP7MAK/instances/instance_id | |
| Now we've run a report synchronously and asynchronously. Next, we'll make our data more useful by narrowing down our results. | |
| Step 3: Filter Report Data | |
| A report is most useful when you use filters to narrow down the data it returns. | |
| You learned how to set filters on the fly, using the standard web interface, in Create a Report on page 79. You can filter a report via the | |
| API as well. The API has commands to add filters, edit them, or remove them. | |
| For example, say you’ve just run a saved report that is filtered to show only items that you have more than a dozen of. Now you want | |
| to filter for smaller quantities, without changing the saved report. To do this, send back the report metadata object with edited filters. | |
| 1. Here’s some typical metadata that your report run might have returned: | |
| '{reportMetadata":{"name":"MerchandiseReport","id":"00OD0000001ZbP7MAK","developerName":"MerchandiseReport", | |
| "reportType":{"type":"MerchandiseList","label":"Merchandise"},"reportFormat":"MATRIX", | |
| "reportBooleanFilter":null,"reportFilters":[{"column": "QUANTITY", | |
| "operator":"greaterThan", | |
| "value":"12"}],"detailColumns":["MERCHANDISE.NAME","CREATED_DATE","QUANTITY"], | |
| "currency":null,"aggregates":["RowCount"],"groupingsDown":[{"name":"CONTACT2.COUNTRY_CODE", | |
| "sortOrder":"Asc","dateGranularity":"None"}],"groupingsAcross":[{"name": | |
| "OWNER","sortOrder":"Asc","dateGranularity":"None"}]}}' | |
| 2. Change the filter and run the report. It will look something like this, with the edited filter shown in bold type. (This example is | |
| synchronous, but an asynchronous run works the same way.) | |
| curl -s -H 'Authorization: OAuth token ...' | |
| https://na1.salesforce.com/services/data/v29.0/analytics/reports/00OD0000001ZbP7MAK -X | |
| POST -d '{reportMetadata":{"name":"MerchandiseReport","id":"00OD0000001ZbP7MAK", | |
| "developerName":"MerchandiseReport","reportType":{"type":"CaseList","label":"Cases"}, | |
| "reportFormat":"MATRIX","reportBooleanFilter":null,"reportFilters":[{"column": "QUANTITY", | |
| "operator":"lessThan", "value":"12"}], | |
| "detailColumns":["MERCHANDISE.NAME","CREATED_DATE","QUANTITY"], | |
| "currency":null,"aggregates":["RowCount"],"groupingsDown":[{"name":"CONTACT2.COUNTRY_CODE", | |
| "sortOrder":"Asc","dateGranularity":"None"}],"groupingsAcross":[{"name":"OWNER", | |
| "sortOrder":"Asc","dateGranularity":"None"}]}}' | |
| You’ve just run a filtered report and retrieved the data. You’re ready to do some cool tricks with it! For some ideas, along with full | |
| instructions and detailed reference information, check out the Salesforce Reports and Dashboards REST API Developer Guide. | |
| Step 4: Find, Show, and Refresh Dashboards | |
| Many users interact with reports mainly through dashboards. You can use the Reports and Dashboards REST API to access and refresh | |
| dashboards just as easily as you can with reports. | |
| For example, suppose your users are tired of paging through screens in search of the dashboards they need. You can use the Reports | |
| and Dashboards REST API to let them choose from among the dashboards they’ve looked at recently. | |
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| Analyze Data with Reports and Dashboards | |
| Step 4: Find, Show, and Refresh Dashboards | |
| 1. To help your users find their dashboards easily, use a GET request on the Dashboard List resource to retrieve a list of recently used | |
| dashboards. | |
| /services/data/v31.0/analytics/dashboards | |
| For each dashboard, the Dashboard List resource sends you back something like this. The URL handle stores the status or results for | |
| the dashboard. The list is sorted by the date when the dashboard was last refreshed. | |
| [ { | |
| "id" : "01ZD00000007QeuMAE", | |
| "name" : "Adoption Dashboard", | |
| "statusUrl" : "/services/data/v31.0/analytics/dashboards/01ZD00000007QeuMAE/status", | |
| "url" : "/services/data/v31.0/analytics/dashboards/01ZD00000007QeuMAE" | |
| }] | |
| 2. You may want to show users their dashboard data in different ways, depending on the platform or device where they’re using your | |
| app. You can pull the data from the dashboard with a GET request to the Dashboard Results resource. | |
| /services/data/v31.0/analytics/dashboards/01ZD00000007S89MAE | |
| What you get back is the actual data in the dashboard, plus its metadata (the dashboard ID, name, component metadata, and any | |
| filters) and its refresh status. The result will look like this: | |
| { | |
| { | |
| "componentData" : [ { | |
| "componentId" : "01aD0000000a36LIAQ", | |
| "reportResult" : { | |
| // Report result data omitted for brevity. | |
| }, | |
| "status" : { | |
| "dataStatus" : "DATA", | |
| "errorCode" : null, | |
| "errorMessage" : null, | |
| "errorSeverity" : null, | |
| "refreshDate" : "2014-04-10T20:37:43.000+0000", | |
| "refreshStatus" : "IDLE" | |
| } | |
| } ], | |
| "dashboardMetadata" : { | |
| "attributes" : { | |
| "dashboardId" : "01ZD00000007S89MAE", | |
| "dashboardName" : "Simple Dashboard", | |
| "statusUrl" : "/services/data/v31.0/analytics/dashboards/01ZD00000007S89MAE/status", | |
| "type" : "Dashboard" | |
| }, | |
| "canChangeRunningUser" : false, | |
| "components" : [ { | |
| "componentData" : 0, | |
| "footer" : null, | |
| "header" : null, | |
| "id" : "01aD0000000a36LIAQ", | |
| "properties" : { | |
| "aggregateName" : "s!AMOUNT", | |
| "maxRows" : null, | |
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| Step 4: Find, Show, and Refresh Dashboards | |
| "sort" : { | |
| "column" : "TYPE", | |
| "sortOrder" : "asc" | |
| }, | |
| "visualizationProperties" : { }, | |
| "visualizationType" : "Bar" | |
| }, | |
| "reportId" : "00OD0000001g2nWMAQ", | |
| "title" : null, | |
| "type" : "Report" | |
| } ], | |
| "description" : null, | |
| "developerName" : "Simple_Dashboard", | |
| "filters" : [ { | |
| "name" : "Amount", | |
| "options" : [ { | |
| "alias" : null, | |
| "endValue" : null, | |
| "id" : "0ICD00000004CBiOAM", | |
| "operation" : "greaterThan", | |
| "startValue" : null, | |
| "value" : "USD 2000000" | |
| } ], | |
| "selectedOption" : null | |
| } ], | |
| "id" : "01ZD00000007S89MAE", | |
| "layout" : { | |
| "columns" : [ { | |
| "components" : [ 0 ] | |
| } ] | |
| }, | |
| "name" : "Simple Dashboard", | |
| "runningUser" : { | |
| "displayName" : "Allison Wheeler", | |
| "id" : "005D00000016V2qIAE" | |
| } | |
| } | |
| } | |
| 3. | |
| If you’re concerned that users might not be seeing the latest data, you can refresh a dashboard remotely by sending a PUT Dashboard | |
| Results request, specifying the dashboard you want to refresh by its ID. | |
| /services/data/v31.0/analytics/dashboards/01ZD00000007S89MAE | |
| The response contains the status URL for the refreshed dashboard: | |
| { | |
| } | |
| "statusUrl" : "/services/data/v31.0/analytics/dashboards/01ZD00000007S89MAE/status" | |
| 93 | |
| ENHANCE THE MOBILE EXPERIENCE WITH ACTIONS | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 20–25 minutes | |
| You’ve already seen how the functionality in your app is available from a mobile device. Indeed, you could say that every Salesforce | |
| developer is a mobile developer! But so far, you’ve only exposed some data and customized the layout. What’s really awesome is when | |
| you can provide users with custom mobile functionality that allows them to be highly productive on the go. | |
| In this tutorial you create quick actions. Quick actions are split into two categories, global actions, and object-specific actions. Global actions | |
| are used when you want to create something quickly from pretty much anywhere in the app. Object-specific actions are used when | |
| you want to automatically associate what you’re doing with something else. | |
| Quickly Create Records Using Global Actions | |
| Global actions are for when you want to create something quickly from pretty much anywhere in the app. For example, imagine one of | |
| your users works at a trade show and meets new people all day long. She needs a way to quickly add someone as a contact without | |
| navigating to a record or associating this person with any other information. That’s what a global action is for: creating quick records | |
| that they can follow up with later. | |
| You can include global actions on page layouts for any supported object, and on global publisher layouts, too. In effect, this means you | |
| can use a global action from anywhere. | |
| The overall steps for creating a global action are: | |
| 1. Create the global action. | |
| 2. Choose which fields users see, and if possible predefine required field values. | |
| 3. Add the action to the global page layout. | |
| Step 1: Create a Global Action | |
| A global action can appear anywhere with a global publisher layout, so it’s useful for things that need to be done quickly, but not | |
| necessarily completely. | |
| 1. | |
| In Setup, enter Actions in the Quick Find box, then select Global Actions. | |
| Notice there are already a number of actions to choose from. You’ve seen some of these already in Salesforce1. | |
| 2. Click New Action. | |
| 3. For Action Type, leave Create a Record selected. | |
| 4. For Target Object, select Merchandise. | |
| 5. For Label, enter New Merch. | |
| 6. Click Save. | |
| 94 | |
| Enhance the Mobile Experience with Actions | |
| Step 2: Customize the Global Layout | |
| After saving, the action layout editor opens. Typically at this point you’d customize the fields that show up here, but there aren’t many | |
| fields on this object, so it’s not necessary yet. Click Save. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| • You created a custom label called New Merch, but you can also choose one of the generated labels by choosing from the Standard | |
| Label Type drop-down list. | |
| • At the bottom of the global action detail page, there’s a section for predefined values. If you predefine a required field, you don’t | |
| need to display that field on the page. Predefining fields is also a great way to customize the mobile experience, and you’ll learn | |
| about that in just a bit. | |
| Step 2: Customize the Global Layout | |
| Before the global action will show up in either the full Salesforce site or Salesforce1, you need to add it to the global publisher layout. | |
| 1. | |
| In Setup, enter Publisher Layouts in the Quick Find box, then select Publisher Layouts. | |
| 2. Next to Global Layout, click Edit. | |
| 3. | |
| In the editor, notice a number of items are in the Quick Actions in the Salesforce Classic Publisher section, such as Post, File, and New | |
| Task. Drag the New Merch action into the left side of the Quick Actions in the Salesforce Classic Publisher section, between Post and | |
| File. | |
| 4. Click Quick Save. | |
| 5. | |
| In the Salesforce1 and Lightning Experience Actions section, click override the predefined actions. | |
| 6. Click the Salesforce1 Actions category in the palette, and then drag New Merch into the Salesforce1 and Lightning Experience | |
| Actions section so that it’s the second item in the list. | |
| 7. Click Save. | |
| 8. Try it out by opening Salesforce1. You see the New Merch action in the action bar. | |
| 95 | |
| Enhance the Mobile Experience with Actions | |
| Create Related Records with Object-specific Actions | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| • In Salesforce1, global actions appear in the action bar on pages to which the global publisher layout applies, such as the feed, groups, | |
| and layouts that haven’t been overridden by another publisher layout. | |
| • If you had placed the New Merch action first in the list, anyone using the full Salesforce site would see the expanded list of fields for | |
| that action every time they opened Chatter. That could be an annoying use of space! So it’s better to locate actions that require a | |
| lot of fields somewhere further down the line. | |
| • Just as you can with regular page layouts, you can assign global publisher layouts to different user profiles. This lets different types | |
| of users have different global actions. | |
| Create Related Records with Object-specific Actions | |
| Object-specific actions let users create records that are automatically associated with related records. The Warehouse app currently doesn’t | |
| have a good use case for an object-specific action, so this example uses the Account and Case standard objects, which come in every | |
| Developer Edition organization. | |
| In this example, a mobile technician might want a way to create a new case while still on site with a customer. If you add a record create | |
| action to the Account object with Case as the target object, the technicians can browse to the customer account record on their mobile | |
| device, and log cases directly from there. | |
| The overall steps for creating an object-specific action are: | |
| 1. Create the object-specific action. | |
| 2. Choose which fields users see. Predefine required field values where possible. | |
| 3. Add the action to one or more of that object’s page layout. | |
| Step 1: Define an Object-Specific Action | |
| For this scenario, you create an invoice that’s associated with an existing account. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Accounts in the Quick Find box, then select Buttons, Links, and Actions. | |
| 2. Click New Action. | |
| 3. For Action Type, leave Create a Record selected. | |
| 4. For Target Object, select Case. | |
| 5. For Label, enter Create a Case, and then click Save. | |
| The action layout editor opens, which is where you can customize the fields assigned to the action. | |
| 6. Remove the Status field from the layout by dragging it into the palette, and then click Save. | |
| 7. You get a warning message about a required field. Click Yes, because you’ll fix that next. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| You just dragged a required field off the page layout. The platform gives you a warning message, and as well it should, users won’t be | |
| able to create a case from the mobile action! The reason for removing that field will become clear in the next step, when you predefine | |
| that field’s value. | |
| 96 | |
| Enhance the Mobile Experience with Actions | |
| Step 2: Choose Fields and Predefine Field Values | |
| Step 2: Choose Fields and Predefine Field Values | |
| Objects can have many fields, and so when a user creates a record for that object, it can result in a long list that takes up the screen space | |
| and time that mobile users don’t have. So it’s important to choose which fields show up on the action layout. Additionally, you can | |
| predefined field values, and then remove them from the action layout. | |
| For this example, mobile technicians are already on site logging the case. Rather than require them to choose a status every time they | |
| create an case, you can predefine the field value. Then you can remove the required field from the action layout. Whenever the Create | |
| a Case action is used, the status will automatically be set. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Accounts in the Quick Find box, then select Buttons, Fields, and Actions. | |
| 2. Click the Create a Case action you just created. | |
| 3. | |
| In the Predefined Values related list, click New. | |
| 4. From the Field Name drop-down list, select Status. | |
| 5. Set its specific value to Working, and then click Save. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| Note that predefined values override default values. In the previous example, imagine that cases created on the full Salesforce site are | |
| typically new, and so whenever a case is created there, the default value is set to “Open”. But when a new case is created from a mobile | |
| device, it’s because there’s a mobile technician on site, and they are actually working on that case. New cases logged from the mobile | |
| device overrides the default value and predefines it as “Working”. As you can see, not only do predefined field values free up screen | |
| space, they can also be used to optimize for what people do when they are mobile. | |
| Step 3: Customize an Object-Specific Layout | |
| Before the action will show up in either the full Salesforce site or Salesforce1, it needs to be added to a page layout. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Accounts in the Quick Find box, then select Page Layouts. | |
| 2. Next to Account Mobile Layout, click Edit. | |
| This layout is the one you created earlier. Notice that the Salesforce1 and Lightning Experience Actions section is empty, and a | |
| message is telling you that actions on this layout are predefined by Salesforce. You don’t want that. You want to customize the | |
| actions on this layout to be pertinent to the work the mobile users need to do. | |
| 3. | |
| In the Salesforce1 and Lightning Experience Actions section, click override the predefined actions. | |
| 4. Click the Salesforce1 Actions category in the palette, and then drag Create a Case so that it’s the second item in the list. | |
| A New Case item is also in the palette. The New Case item is a default action assigned to the Account object, but it’s not editable. | |
| You don’t want this default action, because you created a custom Create a Case action. | |
| 5. Click Save. The new Create a Case action now shows up in the action bar on the Account record pages in Salesforce1 for all mobile | |
| technicians. | |
| 6. Test it on your mobile device by navigating to an account. | |
| 7. On the detail page for an account, tap the Create a Case action. | |
| You don’t see the required Status field for the case, but it’s there, and so is the association to this particular account. | |
| 97 | |
| Enhance the Mobile Experience with Actions | |
| Step 3: Customize an Object-Specific Layout | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| When you create object-specific layouts, keep in mind that only the first four actions in the list appear on the action bar in Salesforce1. | |
| The rest of the actions are accessible from the action menu when users tap | |
| in the action bar. | |
| 98 | |
| SECURE YOUR SYSTEM | |
| Level: Beginner; Duration: 35–40 minutes | |
| The platform makes it easy for you to implement a security policy of least privilege for all types of users. Effectively, each user should | |
| only have the privileges they need to get the job done. Every organization is locked down tightly when you first provision it. These | |
| tutorials teach you how to use various features such as users, profiles, permission sets, and roles to progressively open up access so that | |
| just the right users have access to just the right data at just the right time. | |
| Here’s a preview of how it’s done. | |
| 1. Create profiles and permission sets — Identify the different types of users you need for your application, based on the different | |
| functions each type needs to access. Create a base level profile for each type of user such that each profile has only the permissions | |
| required for that type of user to perform these functions. Then create permission sets to handle exceptions—situations in which a | |
| user may need a few more permissions. | |
| 2. Create users — For each person who needs app and database access, create a user, assigning the user to the appropriate profile | |
| and permission sets. | |
| 3. Set sharing models — For each object, set the organization-wide default record sharing model to determine whether the records | |
| that each user owns are public or private. | |
| 4. Share private records — Use roles, groups, record sharing rules, and other means to share private records with other users. | |
| Prerequisites | |
| Browser Switching | |
| This tutorial requires you to switch between users. To do that, it’s easier to leave one browser open as your admin/developer (the | |
| login you’ve been using so far), and use a different browser for other users. For example, if you are using Safari for your admin/developer | |
| login, use a different browser such as Mozilla Firefox for the Manager and Salesperson users. That way, you can simply switch between | |
| different browsers to configure security and then test record access without having to log out and log in repeatedly. If you’re using | |
| Google Chrome, you can also use Chrome incognito to log in as multiple users in the same browser. | |
| Create a Profile and Permission Set | |
| Duration: 5–10 minutes | |
| Before creating users, it’s best to create one or more profiles and permission sets. Profiles and permissions sets are collections of functional | |
| permissions and settings that control what a user can do. For example, profiles and permission sets control: | |
| • System-level access, including time- and IP-based login restrictions as well as permissions that apply to different functions within | |
| an organization such as the ability to manage users | |
| • Object-level access, including permissions to create, update, and delete records for each object in the database | |
| 99 | |
| Secure Your System | |
| Step 1: Create a Profile | |
| • Field-level access, including the ability to read or edit fields in objects | |
| • Access to invoke Apex classes and custom logic | |
| So what's the difference between a profile and a permission set? Users can have exactly one profile, but could have a number of permission | |
| sets. Here’s how that might work; suppose you need to implement a security policy that has many types of users with similar yet varying | |
| privilege requirements. Rather than building and managing many profiles that differ only slightly, it’s more efficient to build one profile | |
| to manage the common permissions and then use permission sets to manage other specific sets of permissions. | |
| Note: Before you get started creating profiles and permission sets, be aware that the available permissions you can configure for | |
| a profile or permission set depend on the user license you associate with it. | |
| Step 1: Create a Profile | |
| Complete the following steps to create a base profile for the Warehouse app: | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Profiles in the Quick Find box, then select Profiles. | |
| 2. Next to Standard Platform User click Clone. | |
| 3. Name the new profile Warehouse App User, then click Save. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| The profile you clone is important to consider because it determines what type of user license to use. For example, in a DE org, you have | |
| three Salesforce Platform User licenses that these tutorials intend to use. | |
| Step 2: Edit a Profile | |
| Now edit the new profile so that it delivers the common permissions that all types of Warehouse app users need to do their work. | |
| Specifically, every Warehouse app user needs to be able to: | |
| • Switch to the Warehouse app | |
| • See the Invoices tab, but not necessarily the Merchandise tab | |
| • Read Merchandise records because Merchandise is a lookup object | |
| Complete the following steps to create the baseline profile for Warehouse app users: | |
| 1. On the Warehouse App User detail page, click Edit. | |
| 2. | |
| 3. | |
| 4. | |
| In the Custom App Settings section, select Visible and Default for the Warehouse app. | |
| In the Tab Settings section, set Invoices to Default On and Merchandise to Tab Hidden. | |
| In the Custom Object Permissions section, enable Read for the Merchandise object (see the following image) and then click Save. | |
| 100 | |
| Secure Your System | |
| Step 3: Create the Manager Permission Set | |
| Step 3: Create the Manager Permission Set | |
| In this step, you are going to configure security for two different types of Warehouse app users: managers and sales people. Both types | |
| of users can use the Warehouse App profile for their base permissions, but need different privileges thereafter. To handle this requirement, | |
| create two different permission sets. | |
| Use the following steps to create the Warehouse Manager permission set: | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Permission Sets in the Quick Find box, then select Permission Sets and then New. | |
| 2. For Label, enter Warehouse Manager. | |
| 3. For User License, select Salesforce Platform and click Save. | |
| Now modify the new permission set so that it provides access to create, update, and delete Merchandise object records, and view the | |
| Merchandise tab. | |
| 1. From the Warehouse Manager permission set detail page, click Object Settings. | |
| 2. Click Merchandise. | |
| 3. Click Edit. | |
| 4. | |
| 5. | |
| In Tab Settings, enable Available and Visible. | |
| In Object Permissions, enable all permissions. | |
| 6. Click Save. | |
| Step 4: Create the Salesperson Permission Set | |
| Use these steps to create the Warehouse Salesperson permission set: | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Permission Sets in the Quick Find box, then select Permission Sets and then New. | |
| 2. For Label, enter Warehouse Salesperson. | |
| 3. For User License, select Salesforce Platform and click Save. | |
| Now modify the new permission set so that it provides access to create, update, and delete Invoice and Line Item object records, and | |
| view the Invoices tab. | |
| 101 | |
| Secure Your System | |
| Step 4: Create the Salesperson Permission Set | |
| 1. From the Warehouse Salesperson permission set detail page, click Object Settings. | |
| 2. Click Invoices and then Edit. | |
| 3. | |
| 4. | |
| In Tab Settings, enable Available and Visible. | |
| In Object Permissions, enable these permissions: Read, Create, Edit, and Delete. | |
| 5. Click Save. | |
| 6. | |
| In the breadcrumb menu, click Object Settings. | |
| 7. Click Line Items. | |
| 8. Click Edit. | |
| 9. | |
| In Object Permissions, enable the following permissions: Read, Create, Edit, and Delete. | |
| 10. Click Save. | |
| The Warehouse Salesperson permission set doesn’t give access to Merchandise, only Invoices and Line Items. You can see this on the | |
| Object Settings page for the permission set. | |
| 102 | |
| Secure Your System | |
| Create New Users | |
| Create New Users | |
| Duration: 5–10 minutes | |
| Once you have profiles and permission sets in place, you can turn your attention to users. Every new org starts with a super-user | |
| administrator that can access and customize everything in the organization, including profiles, permission sets, and other users. You | |
| happen to be logged in as that super-user right now. Because you don’t want everyone to have that kind of power and access, you’ll | |
| want to restrict what people can do. | |
| In this tutorial you create two new users that represent people that work in the warehouse: a manager and a salesperson. Yes, these are | |
| the same names for the profiles and permission sets you created earlier, but now you’ll assign them to people. | |
| Step 1: Create New Users | |
| Use the following steps to create a new user that serves a "sales manager." In the following steps, make sure to use an email address | |
| that you can access immediately: | |
| 1. | |
| In Setup, enter Users in the Quick Find box, then select Users. | |
| 2. Click New User. | |
| 3. Fill out the form as follows: | |
| • First Name: Sales | |
| • Last Name: Manager | |
| • Email: enter your email address | |
| • Username: your username.manager@your domain | |
| • Nickname: your username.manager | |
| • Role: Leave this field blank for now, you’ll assign roles later. | |
| • User License: Salesforce Platform | |
| • Profile: Warehouse App User | |
| • At the very bottom, clear the checkboxes for the newsletters, but make sure Generate new password and notify | |
| user immediately: is checked. | |
| 4. Click Save. | |
| Repeat the process to create a new user that serves as a "salesperson," with the following exceptions: | |
| • First Name: Sales | |
| • Last Name: Person | |
| • Email: enter your email address | |
| • Username: your username.sales@your domain | |
| • Nickname: your username.sales | |
| • Role: Leave this field blank for now, you’ll assign roles later. | |
| • User License: Salesforce Platform | |
| • Profile: Warehouse App User | |
| • At the very bottom, clear the checkboxes for the newsletters, but make sure Generate new password and notify | |
| user immediately: is checked. | |
| 103 | |
| Secure Your System | |
| Step 2: Test Record Access | |
| You now have two users, both using the Warehouse App User profile. Also, you should have two emails in your email inbox: activation | |
| emails for each new user. | |
| Step 2: Test Record Access | |
| The Warehouse App User profile is assigned to both of these new users, so while they can log into the DE org and start the Warehouse | |
| app, they can’t do much more. First, you’ll log in as the Sales Manager. | |
| 1. You should have an email in your inbox, click the link to log in as the Sales Manager. | |
| Note: This is a good time to switch between browsers, as noted in the Prerequisites. | |
| 2. Change your password and then you should see the Home tab. | |
| 3. Notice that the default app is Warehouse (if you don’t see Warehouse that’s OK, you just missed that setting in the profile, either | |
| edit the profile or select the Warehouse app now), but that you can't see the Merchandise or Invoices tabs. Why not? Because the | |
| user's profile doesn't provide the permissions necessary to access to the underlying objects that power the app. | |
| Step 3: Assign Permission Sets to Users | |
| To give the Sales Manager and Sales Person users access to the permissions they require, simply update each user with the appropriate | |
| permission set. | |
| 1. Switch back to the browser with your administrator login. | |
| 2. | |
| In Setup, enter Users in the Quick Find box, then select Users. | |
| 3. Click Manager, Sales to go to this user's detail page. | |
| 4. | |
| In the Permission Set Assignments section, click Edit Assignments. | |
| 5. Add both the Warehouse Merchandise Manager and Warehouse Sales Person permission sets to the user's list of Enabled Permission | |
| Sets and click Save. | |
| 6. Repeat the previous steps for the Person, Sales user, but this time, add only the Warehouse Sales Person permission set to the user's | |
| list of permission sets. | |
| 104 | |
| Secure Your System | |
| Step 4: Test Record Access | |
| Step 4: Test Record Access | |
| Now it's time to see the effects of adding the permission sets to the two users. | |
| 1. Switch back to your other browser that's already logged into the DE org as the Sales Manager, refresh the page, and notice that the | |
| Merchandise and Invoices tabs are now available. | |
| 2. Click on the Merchandise tab. | |
| 3. Click Go! next to View: All to display all records. | |
| 4. Click on the Invoices tab and check those out, too. | |
| 5. Now log out and, using the activation link in your email, log in as the Salesperson (and change your password). | |
| 6. Confirm that the Salesperson can see the Invoices tab, but not the Merchandise tab, as governed by the user's permission sets. | |
| Tell Me More | |
| As you can see, it’s pretty easy to create profiles and permission sets and then assign them to different users. | |
| Configure Org-Wide Defaults | |
| Duration: 5–10 minutes | |
| Inherent in the design of the platform’s security model is the notion of record ownership, which helps to simplify the implementation of | |
| row-level least-privilege data security policies. The creator of a record owns the record after creation and has full access — the owner | |
| can read, update, delete, and transfer ownership for the record. | |
| Various data access controls determine whether org users can access records they don’t own. These controls include an object’s sharing | |
| model, role hierarchies, groups, and sharing rules. | |
| To begin, each object has a sharing model, also known as an organization-wide default (OWD), which governs the default org-wide | |
| access levels users have to each other’s records in the object. | |
| • With an object that uses a private sharing model, the record owner can read and manage a record, assuming that the user’s profile | |
| provides object-level access. Other users can work with records they don’t own only by other record sharing means. | |
| • With an object that uses a public read-only sharing model, any user can read all records in the object, assuming that the user’s profile | |
| provides the Read permission and field-level access for the object. | |
| • With an object that uses a public read/write sharing model, any user can read and write all records in the object, as permitted by | |
| the object- and field-level permissions in each user’s profile. | |
| 105 | |
| Secure Your System | |
| Step 1: Modify the OWD for Invoices | |
| An object can have different sharing requirements based on the user context, so it’s very important to consider this fact when setting | |
| its OWD. A good rule of thumb is to set each object’s OWD to be as strict as necessary for the most strict user requirement, and then use | |
| sharing rules to open up access, as required. | |
| So why can the Salesperson user see all Invoices and Line Items? To answer this, investigate the OWDs for these objects. | |
| Step 1: Modify the OWD for Invoices | |
| Complete the following steps to view the OWD for Invoices. | |
| 1. Switch back to the browser with your super-user admin login. | |
| 2. From Setup, enter Sharing Settings in the Quick Find box, then select Sharing Settings. | |
| Before continuing, notice that the OWD for both Invoice and Merchandise is set to Public Read/Write. This setting allows every logged-in | |
| user to read, create, update, and delete any record in these objects no matter who owns the record. Now change the OWD for both | |
| objects: | |
| 1. | |
| In the Organization-Wide Defaults section, click Edit. | |
| 2. For Invoice, select Private, and select Grant Access Using Hierarchies. | |
| 3. For Merchandise, select Public Read Only, and select Grant Access Using Hierarchies. | |
| 4. Click Save. | |
| 106 | |
| Secure Your System | |
| Step 2: Test Record Access | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| What about the Line Items object? Before you leave this page, notice that the Line Item object's OWD is "Controlled by Parent." This | |
| setting means that it inherits the OWD of the parent Invoice object. This relationship was created automatically because of the master-detail | |
| relationship between the two objects. Neat, huh? | |
| Step 2: Test Record Access | |
| To see the effects of changing the OWD for Invoice, complete the following steps as a Sales Person: | |
| 1. Switch back to the browser that's logged into the DE org as the Sales Person, then click the Invoices tab. | |
| 2. Click Go! next to View: All. | |
| 3. Notice that the list of available invoices is empty. | |
| Why did this change? Although Sales Person has a permission set that lets the user CRUD Invoice and Line Item records, this permission | |
| only provides the ability to CRUD records that the user owns. Considering that the OWD for these objects is set to Private, and the only | |
| records created were by the admin super-user, Sales Person can’t see that owner’s records. To prove that Sales Person can access only | |
| records that the user owns, complete the following steps to create a new Invoice that Sales Person owns: | |
| 1. On the Invoice detail page, click New , then click Save. | |
| 2. Click New Line Item and add choose some Merchandise. Click Save. | |
| 3. Click the Invoices tab and you’ll see there’s now an invoice there. | |
| 4. Now log out, and log back in as the Sales Manager user. | |
| 5. Repeat the steps above to prove that you cannot access Invoices and Line Items in the system that the Sales Manager user does not | |
| own due to the Private setting for these objects. | |
| Share Records Using a Role Hierarchy | |
| Duration: 5–10 minutes | |
| In the last tutorial you saw that private record access can get in the way of managers seeing what their employees are up to. You need | |
| to open up that record access to managers, but not necessarily all managers. Ideally managers should be able to see all invoices owned | |
| by salespeople that they manage. In this tutorial, you learn how to set up and use a role hierarchy to automatically open up private | |
| records in an organization's org chart. | |
| Step 1: Create a Role Hierarchy | |
| To create a role hierarchy: | |
| 107 | |
| Secure Your System | |
| Step 2: Assign Users to Roles | |
| 1. Switch back to the browser with your administrator login. | |
| 2. From Setup, enter Roles in the Quick Find box, then select Roles. | |
| Notice there’s a drop-down list of sample role hierarchies you can choose. Click through the options and notice the differences. | |
| 3. Chose Territory-based Sample and click Set Up Roles. | |
| 4. Under CEO, click Add Role. | |
| 5. For Label, enter Sales Manager and click Save & New. | |
| 6. For Label, enter Salesperson. | |
| 7. For This role reports to, use the lookup to select Sales Manager. | |
| 8. Click Save. | |
| 9. Now go back to the Creating the Role Hierarchy page. Expand the node for Sales Manager, and you can see the subordinate Salesperson | |
| role. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| There are a lot of extra roles defined based on the sample template you started with. You can delete them if you want, it won’t make | |
| any difference for this set of tutorials. Note that DE orgs come only with two users, so unfortunately you can’t continue to add users. | |
| Step 2: Assign Users to Roles | |
| 1. | |
| If you’re not on the Creating the Role Hierarchy page, from Setup, enter Roles in the Quick Find box, select Roles, and then | |
| click Set Up Roles. | |
| 2. Next to Sales Manager role, click Assign. | |
| 3. Add Sales Manager to the Selected list, then click Save. | |
| 4. Repeat the process to assign the Sales Person user to the Salesperson role. | |
| 108 | |
| Secure Your System | |
| Step 3: Test Record Access | |
| Step 3: Test Record Access | |
| Again, it's time to test the effects of your most recent security configuration changes. | |
| 1. Switch back to the browser that's logged in as the Sales Manager, then click the Invoices tab. | |
| 2. Click Go! next to View: All. | |
| 3. Notice that the Sales Manager user can now work with the invoice owned by the Sales Person user. That's because the role hierarchy | |
| shares private records up the role hierarchy. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| A role hierarchy is just one option for sharing access to private records. For example, organizations often need to share sets of private | |
| records that are related by ownership or other criteria with particular users. For such requirements, you can use groups. All that you need | |
| to do is create a group and your sharing rules using a few more clicks. | |
| 109 | |
| CODE CUSTOM APP LOGIC | |
| To quickly build apps that are easy to maintain, use the platform’s built-in, point-and-click options for business logic whenever possible. | |
| Sometimes though, features such as workflow rules, formula fields, rollup summary fields, and approvals can't meet all of your needs | |
| — that's when you should consider coding app logic. | |
| In this series of tutorials, you learn how to use Apex and code custom app logic that meets unique requirements for app logic. Apex is | |
| the platform’s programming language that you can use to build things like stored procedures and database triggers that are common | |
| in traditional database-driven application development platforms. Along the way, you’ll learn how to use several tools to develop Apex | |
| classes, methods, database triggers, and unit tests. | |
| Explore the Developer Console and Apex | |
| In this tutorial, you get a first look at Apex using the Developer Console. | |
| Step 1: Start the Developer Console | |
| There are several tools that you can use for code. This tutorial gets you started with Apex language fundamentals using one such tool, | |
| the Developer Console, which is part of the browser-based development environment. | |
| Log into your DE org open the Developer Console under Your Name or the quick access menu ( | |
| ). | |
| 110 | |
| Code Custom App Logic | |
| Step 2: Execute Basic Apex Code | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| Notice the Help link click at the top of the of the console? If you click the link you'll find a bunch of really great resources. If you don’t | |
| have time now, check it out later. | |
| Step 2: Execute Basic Apex Code | |
| Now it's time for you to dive into Apex. Use the console to execute a few lines of Apex code. | |
| 1. Click Debug > Open Execute Anonymous Window. | |
| 2. | |
| In the Enter Apex Code window, enter the following code. | |
| for (Integer i=1; i<=10; i++) { | |
| System.debug('Hi ' + i); // output "Hi" to the debug log | |
| } | |
| 3. Select the checkbox for Open Log and then click Execute. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| Apex is a programming language that you can learn quickly, especially if you already know similar languages, such as Java, C++, or C#. | |
| Although the example above is extremely simple, you can learn a lot about Apex by studying it closely. | |
| • Notice that it is a strongly typed language that supports common language fundamentals, such as variable declarations, assignments, | |
| flow control structures such as loops, string concatenation, and comments. It's also an object-oriented language, as the call to the | |
| debug method of the standard System class illustrates. | |
| • If you're wondering why it is called anonymous code, that's because you are not naming and saving the code for later reuse — you | |
| simply execute it, and once you leave the console and clear your work, it's gone. So where's your output? Continue to the next step. | |
| Step 3: Review the Execution Log | |
| Each time you execute some code in the console, you produce a log that contains a series of records that detail what happened during | |
| the code execution. | |
| 1. Click the Logs tab in the lower portion of the console. A sortable list of the most recent execution logs displays. | |
| 2. To look at the records in a specific log, double-click the log of interest. This action creates a new Log tab below with corresponding | |
| Stack, Execution Log, and Source and Variables section. | |
| 111 | |
| Code Custom App Logic | |
| Create an Apex Class and Method | |
| 3. | |
| In the Execution Log section, enter DEBUG (all caps) next to the Filter checkbox. Notice that the log only shows records | |
| corresponding to System.debug calls, which verifies the output of "Hi" plus the value of the loop counter variable as it iterates. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| There's a lot of information in a log. For example, in the Stack section, the Execution Tree tab shows a hierarchical tree of execution | |
| operations, while the Performance Tree tab shows aggregated operation performance data that you can use to diagnose performance | |
| issues. The Execution Log section shows individual durations and log records for the log that you select above in the Logs tab. Execution | |
| logs can have many records, so it's useful to filter noise out and focus on just what interests you. | |
| Feel free to explore the Developer Console and experiment. Remember that it's always there when you need to quickly test, tune, or | |
| debug some Apex code. For more information about the Developer Console, click Help to open Help and Training. | |
| Create an Apex Class and Method | |
| Level: Intermediate; Duration: 20-30 minutes | |
| In this tutorial, you learn how to create persistent Apex classes with named methods, what some app developers might think of as | |
| database-stored procedures. | |
| The Warehouse app currently requires that the user manually enter a line item number for each line item in an invoice. This is not optimal | |
| as it can lead to strange sequences of numbers when people are not careful and when records get deleted. | |
| 112 | |
| Code Custom App Logic | |
| Step 1: Create an Apex Class | |
| Sometimes you run into situations where you can’t solve the problem using declarative tools such as workflow rules, so this tutorial | |
| shows you how to build an Apex class method that automatically renumbers all line items for a given invoice. The goal is to make sure | |
| that every invoice has a collection of line items that starts with the number 1 and increments by 1 with no gaps (1, 2, 3, ...). | |
| Step 1: Create an Apex Class | |
| An Apex class is an encapsulation of related variables, constants, and methods, stored centrally on the platform that your app can use | |
| to process work. | |
| To create an Apex class using the Developer Console: | |
| 1. | |
| In your DE org, open the Developer Console under Your Name or the quick access menu ( | |
| ). | |
| 2. Click File > New > Apex Class. | |
| 3. Name the new class InvoiceUtilities, then click OK. | |
| 4. The default Apex class template creates the new class with the following template code. | |
| public class InvoiceUtilities { | |
| } | |
| 5. Comment the code as follows, and then click File > Save. | |
| public class InvoiceUtilities { | |
| // Class method to renumber Line Items for a given Invoice number. | |
| // Returns a string that indicates success or failure. | |
| } | |
| Step 2: Create a Blueprint Class Method | |
| The Warehouse app currently requires that the user manually enter a line item number for each line item in an invoice. This is not optimal | |
| as it can lead to strange sequences of numbers when people are not careful and when records get deleted. | |
| Unfortunately, there's no way to solve this problem using declarative tools such as workflow rules, so this tutorial shows you how to | |
| build an Apex class method that automatically renumbers all line items for a given invoice. The goal is to make sure that every invoice | |
| has a collection of line items that start with the number 1 and increment by 1 with no gaps (1, 2, 3, ...). | |
| The first thing you might do is determine the basics for the class method you want to build: its name, the parameters it accepts, what | |
| values it returns to the calling environment, and perhaps some pseudo code to outline your plan of attack. | |
| • In the console, modify your Apex class to match the following code. | |
| • Don't save or you'll get a compilation error because we haven't added a return statement yet. | |
| For source code, see https://gist.github.com/3605633. | |
| public class InvoiceUtilities { | |
| // Class method to renumber Line Items for a given Invoice number. | |
| // Returns a string that indicates success or failure. | |
| public static String renumberLineItems(String invoiceName) { | |
| // Create a copy of the target Invoice object and its Line Items. | |
| // Loop through each Line Item, re-numbering as you go | |
| // Update the Line Items in one transaction, rollback if any problems | |
| 113 | |
| Code Custom App Logic | |
| Step 3: Get an Invoice and its Line Items | |
| // and return error messages to the calling environment. | |
| // On success, return a message to the calling program. | |
| } | |
| } | |
| Step 3: Get an Invoice and its Line Items | |
| Now that you have a plan, start filling out the code beneath your comments. Start by creating a local copy of the target invoice and its | |
| line items. | |
| 1. Beneath the method declaration and first comment, enter the following in the method. | |
| Invoice__c invoice = | |
| 2. Now use a SOQL query that orders existing line items and uses a filter to retrieve the target invoice, as given by the method's input | |
| parameter. Notice that the object notation in SOQL is somewhat unique. | |
| Invoice__c invoice = [Select i.Name, (Select Name From Line_Items__r ORDER BY Name) | |
| From Invoice__c i | |
| Where i.Name = :invoiceName LIMIT 1]; | |
| 3. Don't save yet or you'll get a compilation error because we haven't added a return statement yet. | |
| Step 4: Create the Final Version of the Class Method | |
| Now that you have a plan, start filling out the pseudo code to build the final class method logic. Start by creating a local sObject copy | |
| of the target invoice and its line items (see lines 8-10 below). The method code includes a SOQL query that orders existing line items | |
| (see line 8) and uses a filter to retrieve the target invoice, as given by the method's input parameter (see line 10). Notice that the object | |
| notation in SOQL is somewhat unique. | |
| Note: Remember to Save your class as you go along in this step. On each save operation, make sure to check the Problems pane | |
| and confirm that you don't have any compilation errors. | |
| For source code, see https://gist.github.com/3605645. | |
| public class InvoiceUtilities { | |
| // Class method to renumber Line Items for a given Invoice number. | |
| // Returns a string that indicates success or failure. | |
| public static String renumberLineItems(String invoiceName) { | |
| // Create a copy of the target Invoice object and its Line Items. | |
| Invoice__c invoice = | |
| [SELECT i.Name, (Select Name FROM Line_Items__r ORDER BY Name) | |
| FROM Invoice__c i | |
| WHERE i.Name = :invoiceName LIMIT 1]; | |
| // Loop through each Line Item, renumbering as you go. | |
| // Update the Line Items in one transaction, rollback if any problems | |
| // and return error messages to the calling environment. | |
| // On success, return a message to the calling program. | |
| return 'Line items renumbered successfully.'; | |
| 114 | |
| Code Custom App Logic | |
| Step 4: Create the Final Version of the Class Method | |
| } | |
| } | |
| Save the updated Apex class. On each save operation, check the Problems pane and confirm that you don't have any compilation errors. | |
| If you do, fix them appropriately and save the corrected code. | |
| Next, update the class with a loop to process and renumber each line item (see lines 13-18). | |
| For source code, https://gist.github.com/3605650. | |
| public class InvoiceUtilities { | |
| // Class method to renumber Line Items for a given Invoice number. | |
| // Returns a string that indicates success or failure. | |
| public static String renumberLineItems(String invoiceName) { | |
| // Create a copy of the target Invoice object and its Line Items. | |
| Invoice__c invoice = | |
| [SELECT i.Name, (SELECT Name FROM Line_Items__r ORDER BY Name) | |
| FROM Invoice__c i | |
| WHERE i.Name = :invoiceName LIMIT 1]; | |
| // Loop through each Line Item, renumbering as you go. | |
| Integer i = 1; | |
| for (Line_Item__c item : invoice.Line_Items__r) { | |
| item.Name = String.valueOf(i); | |
| System.debug(item.Name); | |
| i++; | |
| } | |
| // Update the Line Items in one transaction, rollback if any problems, | |
| // and return error messages to the calling environment. | |
| // On success, return a message to the calling program. | |
| return 'Line items renumbered successfully.'; | |
| } | |
| } | |
| Notice in line 14, the FOR loop uses Apex-specific object notation to reference the line items of the invoice. Line 18 includes a | |
| System.debug statement to output some handy information to the debug log. | |
| Now create the final version of the class method so that it updates the database with the new version of the invoice's line items (see | |
| lines 22-30). | |
| For source code, see https://gist.github.com/3605654. | |
| public class InvoiceUtilities { | |
| // Class method to renumber Line Items for a given Invoice number. | |
| // Returns a string that indicates success or failure. | |
| public static String renumberLineItems(String invoiceName) { | |
| // Create a copy of the target Invoice object and its Line Items. | |
| Invoice__c invoice = | |
| [SELECT i.Name, (SELECT Name FROM Line_Items__r ORDER BY Name) | |
| FROM Invoice__c i | |
| WHERE i.Name = :invoiceName LIMIT 1]; | |
| 115 | |
| Code Custom App Logic | |
| Step 5: Manually Test the Apex Class Method | |
| // Loop through each Line Item, renumbering as you go. | |
| Integer i = 1; | |
| for (Line_Item__c item : invoice.Line_Items__r) { | |
| item.Name = String.valueOf(i); | |
| System.debug(item.Name); | |
| i++; | |
| } | |
| // Update the Line Items in one transaction, rollback if any problems | |
| // and return error messages to the calling environment. | |
| try { | |
| Database.update(invoice.Line_Items__r); | |
| } | |
| catch (DmlException e) { | |
| return e.getMessage(); | |
| } | |
| // On success, return a message to the calling program. | |
| return 'Line items re-numbered successfully.'; | |
| } | |
| } | |
| This method uses try/catch block to update the database and handle any unforeseen runtime exceptions that might occur. | |
| • In the try block (see lines 22-24), the Database.update method is a standard Apex method that you can use to update one | |
| or more sObjects. Again, notice the object notation to reference the target invoice's related line items | |
| (invoice.Line_Items__r). | |
| • The catch block (see lines 25-27) catches any DmlException. It contains a return statement that returns the exception error | |
| message to the caller. | |
| • If the method continues past the try/catch block, which means that no exception was thrown and the method didn't return the | |
| exception error message, it simply returns a standard message to indicate success (see line 30). | |
| Step 5: Manually Test the Apex Class Method | |
| Once you confirm that you can save the Apex class without any errors, it's time to test your new class method. | |
| First, create some test data. | |
| 1. | |
| In a new browser tab, open up an existing invoice that has some line items. If you don’t have any existing invoices, create one. Note | |
| the Invoice Number. | |
| 2. Update or insert one or more line items so that there is an unwanted sequence of line item numbers (e.g., 1, 3, 6). If you didn’t have | |
| any test data at the beginning of this step, you may need to create a couple of merchandise records before you can add any line | |
| items. | |
| 3. Now you can call the method and target the invoice above to renumber its line items. | |
| 4. Switch back to the Developer Console. Choose Debug > Open Execute Anonymous Window. | |
| 5. Execute the following anonymous Apex. For the method input parameter, substitute the invoice number that you noted above. For | |
| example, if your invoice number is INV-0000, substitute that for INV-0004 in the following code: | |
| String s = InvoiceUtilities.renumberLineItems('INV-0004'); | |
| 116 | |
| Code Custom App Logic | |
| Call an Apex Class Method Using a Button | |
| 6. | |
| If you switch back to your browser and refresh the Invoice detail page, you should notice that its line items are now in sequence | |
| without any gaps. | |
| Congratulations! With less than 20 lines of Apex code, you've built an Apex class method to solve a real-world business requirement. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| The execution output is interesting to inspect if you want to learn more about Apex code execution. Remember from an earlier tutorial, | |
| in the console, you can view logs for code executions. Although a full discussion of the log output for the above class method execution | |
| is outside the scope of this tutorial, here are a few highlights. | |
| • Filter for SOQL_EXECUTE and you see that the embedded SOQL query retrieved one row from the database. | |
| • Filter for DEBUG and you see the output from the System.debug calls in the method. | |
| Call an Apex Class Method Using a Button | |
| Level: Advanced; Duration: 20-30 minutes | |
| In the previous tutorial, you created an Apex class method that your app can use to renumber an invoice's line items that are out of | |
| sequence. But you certainly can't expect users to execute anonymous Apex code to call the method. This tutorial shows you how to | |
| create a custom button on the Invoice detail page that calls the method for the current invoice. | |
| Step 1: Create a Custom Button | |
| By default, every detail page includes several standard buttons, including Edit, Delete, and Clone. You can also create custom buttons | |
| and add them to page layouts as needed. Use the following steps to create a custom button for the Invoice detail page. | |
| 1. From Setup in your Developer Edition organization, enter Objects in the Quick Find box, select Objects, and then click | |
| Invoice. | |
| 2. Scroll down to the Buttons, Links, and Actions section and click New Button or Link. | |
| 3. | |
| In the Label field, enter Renumber Line Items. | |
| 4. For Display Type choose Detail Page Button. | |
| 117 | |
| Code Custom App Logic | |
| Step 2: Add the Button to the Page Layout | |
| 5. For Behavior choose Execute JavaScript. | |
| 6. For Content Source choose OnClick JavaScript. | |
| 7. Notice that you are creating a Detail Page button that executes some JavaScript. For your convenience, here is the JavaScript code | |
| that you can copy and paste into the form. For source code, see https://gist.github.com/3605659. | |
| {!REQUIRESCRIPT("/soap/ajax/29.0/connection.js")} | |
| {!REQUIRESCRIPT("/soap/ajax/29.0/apex.js")} | |
| var result = sforce.apex.execute("InvoiceUtilities","renumberLineItems",{invoiceName:"{! | |
| Invoice__c.Name}"}); | |
| alert(result); | |
| window.location.reload(); | |
| 8. Make sure your form matches the following screen, and then click Save. | |
| 9. When prompted, click OK. We’ll add this button to a page layout in the next step. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| Examine the code you pasted. | |
| • Lines 1 and 2 load two libraries from the Salesforce AJAX Toolkit, a JavaScript wrapper around the Force.com SOAP API. | |
| • Line 3 leverages the AJAX Toolkit to call the method, passing in the Name of the current invoice. | |
| • Lines 4 and 5 are standard JavaScript calls that display an alert message and refresh the current page. | |
| Step 2: Add the Button to the Page Layout | |
| Next up is to add the new button to the Invoice detail page layout. (Page layout modification is something that this tutorial assumes | |
| you already understand, so this step is brief.) To add the custom button to the Invoice page layout: | |
| 1. From the Invoice custom object detail page, scroll down to the Page Layouts. | |
| 2. Click Edit next to the Invoice Layout. | |
| 118 | |
| Code Custom App Logic | |
| Step 3: Modify the Apex Class | |
| 3. | |
| In the palette at the top, click Buttons. | |
| 4. Drag the Renumber Line Items button to the Custom Buttons section of the page layout, then click Save. | |
| Step 3: Modify the Apex Class | |
| The JavaScript in the custom button leverages the AJAX Toolkit to make SOAP calls from JavaScript. Considering this, there are two minor | |
| changes that you need to make to the Apex class and method so that it supports SOAP API calls. | |
| To modify the Apex class without leaving the browser: | |
| 1. From Setup, enter “Apex Classes” in the Quick Find box, then select Apex Classes. | |
| 2. Notice next to the InvoiceUtilities class there are three links: Edit, Del, and Security. Click Edit. | |
| 3. Modify the scope for both the class and the method from public to global (line 1) and webservice (line 4), then click Save. | |
| For source code, see https://gist.github.com/3605663. | |
| Your final code should be as follows: | |
| global with sharing class InvoiceUtilities { | |
| // Class method to renumber Line Items for a given Invoice number. | |
| // Returns a string that indicates success or failure. | |
| webservice static String renumberLineItems(String invoiceName) { | |
| // Create a copy of the target Invoice object and its Line Items. | |
| Invoice__c invoice = | |
| [SELECT i.Name, (SELECT Name FROM Line_Items__r ORDER BY Name) | |
| FROM Invoice__c i | |
| WHERE i.Name = :invoiceName LIMIT 1]; | |
| // Loop through each Line Item, renumbering as you go. | |
| Integer i = 1; | |
| for (Line_Item__c item : invoice.Line_Items__r) { | |
| item.Name = String.valueOf(i); | |
| System.debug(item.Name); | |
| i++; | |
| } | |
| 119 | |
| Code Custom App Logic | |
| Step 4: Test the New Button | |
| // Update the Line Items in one transaction, rollback if any problems | |
| // and return error messages to the calling environment. | |
| try { | |
| Database.update(invoice.Line_Items__r); | |
| } | |
| catch (DmlException e) { | |
| return e.getMessage(); | |
| } | |
| // On success, return a message to the calling program. | |
| return 'Line items renumbered successfully.'; | |
| } | |
| } | |
| When you return to the list of Apex classes, notice that there's a new link for the InvoiceUtilities class: WSDL. If you click it, | |
| you see a WSDL file that apps can use to interface with the class. | |
| Step 4: Test the New Button | |
| Now it's time to test the new button and modified Apex class method. | |
| 1. Click the Invoices tab of the Warehouse app. | |
| 2. Open any invoice that has line items. | |
| 3. Update or insert one or more line items so that there is an unwanted sequence of line item numbers (for example, 1, 3, 6). | |
| 4. Click Renumber Line Items. An alert should pop up to indicate success. After you acknowledge the alert, the page refreshes with | |
| the updated line items. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| Another way to call Apex class methods from JavaScript is to use the platform’s JavaScript remoting feature. For more information, see | |
| the Apex Developer Guide. | |
| Create a Database Trigger | |
| Level: Intermediate; Duration: 20-30 minutes | |
| 120 | |
| Code Custom App Logic | |
| Step 1: Create a Database Trigger | |
| Apex triggers are useful for implementing business logic that you can’t implement with clicks (such as workflow rules). In this tutorial, | |
| the business scenario is this: by default, master-detail relationships automatically cascade the deletion of a master record to all related | |
| detail records. Our Warehouse app needs to deviate from this default behavior and employ a trigger that prevents the deletion of Invoices | |
| that have Line Items. | |
| Step 1: Create a Database Trigger | |
| To create a trigger on the Invoice object. | |
| 1. From Setup, enter Objects in the Quick Find box, then select Objects and click Invoice. | |
| 2. Scroll down to Triggers and click New. | |
| 3. | |
| In the editor, replace <name> with DeleteRestrictInvoice. | |
| 4. Similarly, replace <events> with before delete. | |
| 5. Replace the template code with the following. | |
| For source code, see https://gist.github.com/3605667. | |
| trigger DeleteRestrictInvoice on Invoice__c (before delete) { | |
| // create a list of Invoices in Trigger.oldMap along with their Line Items | |
| List<Invoice__c> invoices = [Select i.Name, (Select Name From Line_Items__r) | |
| From Invoice__c i | |
| Where i.Id IN :Trigger.oldMap.keySet()]; | |
| // loop through the Invoices, attaching errors to those that have Line Items | |
| for (Invoice__c invoice : invoices) { | |
| if (!invoice.Line_Items__r.isEmpty()) { | |
| Trigger.oldMap.get(invoice.id).addError('Cannot delete Invoice with Line Items'); | |
| } | |
| } | |
| } | |
| 6. Click Save. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| • A trigger can fire before or after DML operations. The trigger in this tutorial fires before the execution of a delete operation that | |
| targets one or more records in the Invoice object. | |
| • Triggers have special variables accessible to them called context variables. In a nutshell, old and new context variables provide copies | |
| of old and new sObjects being updated by the call that fires the trigger. As you can see in the code, context variables are handy to | |
| scope processing in a trigger body. | |
| • In the FOR loop, the trigger simply adds a validation error to any Invoice that has Line Items, which in turn causes the Force.com | |
| platform to roll back the transaction that fires the trigger (in this case, delete). | |
| Step 2: Manually Test the Trigger | |
| To test that the trigger does what you want it to, open an invoice that has line items, and click Delete. When you do, you should see an | |
| error. | |
| 121 | |
| Code Custom App Logic | |
| Create Unit Tests | |
| Next, try to delete an invoice that does not have any line items to make sure that the trigger does not prevent the deletion of such | |
| invoices. | |
| Create Unit Tests | |
| Level: Advanced; Duration: 20-30 minutes | |
| Apex provides built-in support for unit test creation and execution, including test results that indicate how much code is covered. Before | |
| you can add Apex classes and database triggers in your production org, you must create unit tests that programmatically validate at | |
| least 75% of the code in your organization. This tutorial gets you started with unit testing. | |
| Why test your code with unit tests? Testing helps verify that your code executes as you expect it to, and that it doesn’t consume | |
| unnecessary or extraordinary amounts of system resource. As a side-effect, it also helps ensure the integrity of Force.com releases. | |
| Step 1: Create a Unit Test | |
| Unit test methods take no arguments and commit no data to the database. To create unit tests for the DeleteRestrictInvoice | |
| trigger, complete the following steps: | |
| 1. | |
| Open the Developer Console under Your Name or the quick access menu ( | |
| ). | |
| 2. Click File > New > Apex Class. | |
| 3. | |
| In the popup, enter TestDeleteRestrictInvoice for the class name and click OK. | |
| 4. Replace the auto-generated code with the following code into the new Apex class editor, and then press CTRL+S to save the class. | |
| For source code, see https://gist.github.com/3605669. | |
| @isTest | |
| private class TestDeleteRestrictInvoice { | |
| // Invoice generator, with or without a Line Item | |
| static Invoice__c createNewInvoice(Boolean withLineItem) { | |
| // Create test Merchandise | |
| Merchandise__c merchandise = new Merchandise__c( | |
| Name = 'Test Laptop', | |
| Quantity__c = 1000, | |
| Price__c = 500 | |
| ); | |
| insert merchandise; | |
| // Create test Invoice | |
| Invoice__c invoice = new Invoice__c(); | |
| insert invoice; | |
| // Create test Line Item and insert it into the database, if withLineItem == true | |
| if (withLineItem) { | |
| Line_Item__c item = new Line_Item__c( | |
| 122 | |
| Code Custom App Logic | |
| Step 1: Create a Unit Test | |
| name = '1', | |
| Quantity__c = 1, | |
| Merchandise__c = merchandise.Id, | |
| Invoice__c = invoice.Id | |
| ); | |
| insert item; | |
| } | |
| return invoice; | |
| } | |
| // Single row Invoice with no Line Items => delete | |
| static testMethod void verifyInvoiceNoLineItemsDelete(){ | |
| // Create test Invoice and insert it | |
| Invoice__c invoice = createNewInvoice(false); | |
| // Delete the Invoice, capture the result | |
| Database.DeleteResult result = Database.delete(invoice, false); | |
| // Assert success, because target Invoice doesn't have Line Items | |
| System.assert(result.isSuccess()); | |
| } | |
| // Single row Invoice with Line Items => delete restrict | |
| static testMethod void verifyInvoiceLineItemsRestrict(){ | |
| // Create test Invoice and Line Item and insert them | |
| Invoice__c invoice = createNewInvoice(true); | |
| // Delete the Invoice, capture the result | |
| Database.DeleteResult result = Database.delete(invoice, false); | |
| // Assert failure-not success, because target Invoice has tracks | |
| System.assert(!result.isSuccess()); | |
| } | |
| // Bulk delete of Invoice, one without Line Items, another with | |
| static testMethod void verifyBulkInvoiceDeleteRestrict(){ | |
| // Create two test Invoices, one with and without a Line Item | |
| Invoice__c[] invoices = new List<Invoice__c>(); | |
| invoices.add(createNewInvoice(false)); | |
| invoices.add(createNewInvoice(true)); | |
| // Delete the Invoices, opt_allOrNone = false, capture the results. | |
| Database.DeleteResult[] results = Database.delete(invoices, false); | |
| // Assert success for first Invoice | |
| System.assert(results[0].isSuccess()); | |
| // Assert not success for second Invoice | |
| System.assert(!results[1].isSuccess()); | |
| } | |
| } | |
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| Code Custom App Logic | |
| Step 2: Run Unit Tests | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| The comments in the code explain the gist of the test methods. Notice that it’s important, when building and testing triggers, to keep | |
| in mind that triggers can fire as the result of both single-row and bulk triggering statements. Here are a few important points to understand | |
| about building unit tests. | |
| • Use the @isTest annotation to define classes or individual methods that only contain code used for testing. | |
| • Test classes must be top-level classes. | |
| • Unit test methods are static methods that are defined with the @isTest annotation or the testMethod keyword. | |
| Step 2: Run Unit Tests | |
| When you run a test class, the platform executes all of the unit test methods in the class and returns a report for the test run. | |
| 1. | |
| In the Developer Console, click Test > New Run. | |
| 2. To add your test class, click TestDeleteRestrictInvoice, and then click >. | |
| 3. Click Run. | |
| The test result displays in the Tests tab. You can expand the test run to view which methods were run. You’ll see an output similar | |
| to this. | |
| Any time you modify the trigger, make sure to run the corresponding unit tests so that you have confidence that the trigger still works | |
| properly. | |
| 124 | |
| BUILD A CUSTOM USER INTERFACE WITH VISUALFORCE | |
| Duration: 30–45 minutes | |
| Visualforce is a component-based user interface framework for the Salesforce platform. In previous tutorials you built and extended your | |
| app by using a user interface that is automatically generated. Visualforce gives you a lot more control over the user interface by providing | |
| a view framework that includes a tag-based markup language similar to HTML, a library of reusable components that can be extended, | |
| and an Apex-based controller model. Visualforce supports the Model-View-Controller (MVC) style of user interface design, and is highly | |
| flexible. | |
| Code a Custom User Interface | |
| Duration: 30–45 minutes | |
| In this tutorial, you use Visualforce to create a new interface for the Warehouse app that displays an inventory count sheet that lets you | |
| list your inventory of merchandise, as well as update the counts on each. The purpose of the count sheet is to update the computer | |
| system with a physical count of the merchandise, in case they are different. | |
| Step 1: Enable Visualforce Development Mode | |
| Development Mode embeds a Visualforce page editor in your browser. It allows you to see code and preview the page at the same time. | |
| Development Mode also adds an Apex editor for editing controllers and extensions. | |
| 1. From your personal settings, enter Advanced User Details in the Quick Find box, then select Advanced User Details. | |
| No results? Enter Personal Information in the Quick Find box, then select Personal Information. | |
| 2. Click Edit. | |
| 3. Select the Development Mode checkbox, and click Save. | |
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| Build a Custom User Interface with Visualforce | |
| Step 2: Create a Visualforce Page | |
| Step 2: Create a Visualforce Page | |
| In this step you create a Visualforce page that will serve as an inventory count sheet. | |
| 1. | |
| In your browser, add the text /apex/CountSheet to the URL for your Salesforce instance. For example, if your Salesforce | |
| instance is https://na1.salesforce.com, the new URL would be | |
| https://na1.salesforce.com/apex/CountSheet. You will get an error message: Page CountSheet does not exist. | |
| 2. Click the Create Page CountSheet link to create the new page. | |
| 3. Click the Page Editor link (CountSheet) in the bottom left corner of the page. The Page Editor tab displays the code and a preview | |
| of the new page (which has some default text). It should look like this. | |
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| Build a Custom User Interface with Visualforce | |
| Step 3: Add a Stylesheet Static Resource | |
| 4. You don't really want the heading of the page to say “Congratulations”, so change the contents of the <h1> tag to Inventory | |
| Count Sheet, and go ahead and remove the comments. The code for the page should now look like this. | |
| <apex:page> | |
| <h1>Inventory Count Sheet</h1> | |
| </apex:page> | |
| 5. Click the Save icon at the top of the Page Editor. The page reloads to reflect your changes. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| • Notice that the code for the page looks a lot like standard HTML. That's because a Visualforce page combines HTML tags, such as | |
| <h1>, with Visualforce-specific tags, which usually start with <apex:> | |
| • If your browser has trouble displaying Developer Mode, you can turn it off in the same way you turned it on. To create a new | |
| Visualforce page, from Setup, enter Visualforce Pages in the Quick Find box, then select Visualforce Pages. | |
| Step 3: Add a Stylesheet Static Resource | |
| You want your Warehouse app to look slick, so you're going to use a custom stylesheet (CSS file) to specify the color, font, and arrangement | |
| of text on your page. Most Web pages and Web designers use CSS, a standard Web technology, for this purpose, so we've created one | |
| for you. In order for your pages to reference a stylesheet, you have to upload it as a static resource. A static resource is a file or collection | |
| of files that is stored on Salesforce. Once your stylesheet is added as a static resource, it can be referenced by any of your Visualforce | |
| pages. | |
| To add a style sheet as a static resource: | |
| 1. | |
| In your browser, go to developer.force.com/workbook/styles. Download the file to your desktop. If the file automatically downloads, | |
| make sure to save it as a .zip file. | |
| 2. Back in the app, from Setup, enter Static Resources in the Quick Find box, then select Static Resources, and click | |
| New. | |
| 3. | |
| In the Name field, enter styles. | |
| 4. Click Choose File or Browse..., and find the styles.zip file you downloaded. | |
| 5. | |
| In the Cache Control drop-down list, select Public. | |
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| Build a Custom User Interface with Visualforce | |
| Step 3: Add a Stylesheet Static Resource | |
| 6. Click Save. | |
| Now you need to modify your Visualforce page to reference the stylesheet. | |
| 1. | |
| Just as you did when you created the page, add the text /apex/CountSheet to the URL for your Salesforce instance. | |
| 2. Modify the attributes of the <apex:page> tag and enter the following code to remove the standard stylesheet, the header, and | |
| the sidebar. | |
| <apex:page standardStylesheets="false" showHeader="false" sidebar="false"> | |
| 3. Now you need to tell the page where to find the stylesheet, so add a new line below the first <apex:page> tag and type <apex: | |
| 4. The editor has code insight, which gives you a drop-down list of the elements that are available in this context. Start typing | |
| stylesheet and when you see apex:stylesheet, select it. | |
| 5. Now specify the location of the stylesheet as shown. | |
| <apex:stylesheet value="{!URLFOR($Resource.styles, 'styles.css')}" /> | |
| 6. Verify that your code looks like the following: | |
| <apex:page standardStylesheets="false" showHeader="false" sidebar="false"> | |
| <apex:stylesheet value="{!URLFOR($Resource.styles, 'styles.css')}" /> | |
| <h1>Inventory Count Sheet</h1> | |
| </apex:page> | |
| 7. Click the Save icon at the top of the Page Editor. | |
| Note how the page now looks very different, the title is in a different font and location, and the standard header and sidebar are no | |
| longer present. | |
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| Build a Custom User Interface with Visualforce | |
| Step 4: Add a Controller to the Page | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| Let's take a look at that stylesheet code in a little more detail. | |
| • $Resource is a global variable accessible in Visualforce pages. With $Resource.styles, you refer to the resource called | |
| "styles" that you created earlier. | |
| • The URLFOR() function locates the static resource, and a file within that resource, and calculates the URL that should be generated | |
| in your final page. If the syntax looks familiar, it's because you've already encountered it to dynamically evaluate values when the | |
| Visualforce page is rendered. | |
| • Why did you download a .zip file for only one small stylesheet? Usually stylesheets (and other static references) come in bundles of | |
| more than one, and so it's useful to see the code that accesses a .zip file. If you had simply uploaded styles.css you could refer | |
| to it using <apex:stylesheet value="{$Resource.styles}" />. While that code is simpler, you wouldn't know | |
| how to refer to files in an archive. After the stylesheet is uploaded as a .zip file in a static resource, all you need to do is enter the | |
| name of the stylesheet between single quotes: <apex:stylesheet value="{!URLFOR($Resource.styles, | |
| 'enter_stylesheet_name.css')}" />. | |
| Step 4: Add a Controller to the Page | |
| Visualforce's Model-View-Controller design pattern makes it easy to separate the view and its styling from the underlying database and | |
| logic. In MVC, the view (the Visualforce page) interacts with a controller. In our case, the controller is usually an Apex class, which exposes | |
| some functionality to the page. For example, the controller may contain the logic that should be executed when a button is clicked. A | |
| controller also typically interacts with the model (the database)—exposing data that the view might want to display. | |
| All Salesforce objects have default standard controllers that can be used to interact with the data associated with the object, so in many | |
| cases you don't need to write the code for the controller yourself. You can extend the standard controllers to add new functionality or | |
| create custom controllers from scratch. In this tutorial you'll use the default controller. | |
| 1. | |
| If the Page Editor isn't open on your Visualforce page, click Page Editor to edit the page. | |
| 2. Enable the Merchandise__c standard controller and add the standard list controller definition by editing the first | |
| <apex:page> tag. The editor ignores whitespace, so you can enter the text on a new line. | |
| <apex:page standardStylesheets="false" showHeader="false" sidebar="false" | |
| standardController="Merchandise__c" recordSetVar="products"> | |
| 3. Click the Save icon at the top of the Page Editor. You won't notice any change on the page. However, because you've indicated that | |
| the page should use a controller, and defined the variable products, the variable will be available to you in the body of the page | |
| and it will represent a list of merchandise records. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| Take a look at what you added to the <apex:page> tag. | |
| • Setting the standardController attribute connects your page to the standard controller for a specific object, in this case, | |
| the Merchandise__c object. | |
| • Setting the recordSetVar attribute puts a standard controller into "list" mode and sets a products variable, which will | |
| contain the list of merchandise records. | |
| Step 5: Display the Inventory Count Sheet as a Visualforce Page | |
| You now have all the functionality in place to flesh out the Visualforce page. It will display a table of all the merchandise records, together | |
| with an input field on each so that you can update the inventory count. | |
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| Build a Custom User Interface with Visualforce | |
| Step 5: Display the Inventory Count Sheet as a Visualforce | |
| Page | |
| 1. | |
| In the line below the </h1> tag, start typing <apex:f on a new line, and highlight <apex:form> when it appears in the | |
| drop-down list. The form will allow you to make updates to the page. | |
| 2. Press ENTER, and notice that the system generates the opening and closing tags for you. | |
| 3. Place your cursor between the tags and create a data table. Start by typing <apex:d and press ENTER to select dataTable | |
| from the drop-down list. | |
| 4. Now you need to add some attributes to the dataTable tag. On one or more lines within the tag, enter the following. | |
| <apex:dataTable value="{!products}" var="pitem" rowClasses="odd,even"> | |
| The value attribute indicates which list of items the dataTable component should iterate over. The var attribute assigns | |
| each item of that list, for one single iteration, to the pvitem variable. The rowClasses attribute assigns CSS styling names to | |
| alternate rows. | |
| 5. Now you are going to define each column, and determine where it gets its data by looking up the appropriate field in the pitem | |
| variable. Add the following code between the opening and closing dataTable tags. | |
| <apex:dataTable value="{!products}" var="pitem" rowClasses="odd,even"> | |
| <apex:column headerValue="Product"> | |
| <apex:outputText value="{!pitem.name}"/> | |
| </apex:column> | |
| </apex:dataTable> | |
| 6. Click Save, and you will see your table appear. | |
| The headerValue attribute has simply provided a header title for the column, and below it you'll see a list of rows: one for each | |
| merchandise record. The expression {!pitem.name} indicates that we want to display the name field of the current row. | |
| 7. Now, after the closing tag for the first column, add two more columns. | |
| <apex:column headerValue="Inventory"> | |
| <apex:outputField value="{!pitem.Quantity__c}"/> | |
| </apex:column> | |
| <apex:column headerValue="Physical Count"> | |
| <apex:inputField value="{!pitem.Quantity__c}"/> | |
| </apex:column> | |
| Note: The second column is an inputField, not an outputField. The inputField will display a value, but it will | |
| also allow you to change it. | |
| 8. Click Save and you have an inventory count sheet! It lists all the merchandise records, displays the current inventory, and provides | |
| an input field for the physical count. | |
| 9. As a final embellishment, add a button that will modify the physical count on any row and refresh the values on the page. To do | |
| this, enter the following code directly above the </apex:form> line. | |
| <br/> | |
| <apex:commandButton action="{!quicksave}" value="Update Counts" /> | |
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| Build a Custom User Interface with Visualforce | |
| Step 6: Add Inline Editing Support | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| • The dataTable component produces a table with rows, and each row is found by iterating over a list. The standard controller | |
| you used for this page was set to Merchandise__c, and the recordSetVar to products. As a result, the controller | |
| automatically populated the products list variable with merchandise records retrieved from the database. It's this list that the | |
| dataTable component uses. | |
| • You need a way to reference the current row as you iterate over the list. That statement var="pitem" assigns a variable called | |
| pitem that holds the current row. | |
| • Every standard controller has various methods that exist for all Salesforce objects. The commandButton component displays the | |
| button, and invokes a method called quicksave on the standard controller, which updates the values on the records. Here, | |
| you're updating the physical count of the product and performing a quick save, which updates the product with the new count. | |
| • Although pagination isn't shown in this example, the functionality is there. If you have enough records to page through them, add | |
| the following code below the commandButton for page-flipping action. | |
| <apex:commandLink action="{!next}" value="Next" rendered="{!hasNext}" /> | |
| Step 6: Add Inline Editing Support | |
| You now have a Visualforce page that contains a table that displays all the merchandise records and allows you to edit the inventory | |
| count through the physical count input field. In this step, you modify this table to add inline editing support for the inventory output | |
| field. Also, since inline editing makes the physical count input field unnecessary, you remove the last column, which contains this field. | |
| After carrying out this step, you will be able to edit the inventory count by double-clicking a field in the Inventory column. | |
| Instead of using an inputField to edit the physical count in the last column in the previous step, you can make the inventory | |
| column editable by adding an inlineEditSupport component as a child component of the outputField component. The | |
| following procedure shows how to do this. | |
| 1. Delete the following markup for the physical count column. | |
| <apex:column headerValue="Physical Count"> | |
| <apex:inputField value="{!pitem.Quantity__c}"/> | |
| </apex:column> | |
| 2. Within the inventory column, break up the outputField component so that it has an end tag, as follows. | |
| <apex:outputField value="{!pitem.Quantity__c}"> | |
| </apex:outputField> | |
| 3. Between the outputField's start and end tag, insert the inlineEditSupport component. | |
| <apex:inlineEditSupport event="ondblclick" showOnEdit="update"/> | |
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| Build a Custom User Interface with Visualforce | |
| Step 6: Add Inline Editing Support | |
| 4. Now that you've added the inlineEditSupport component, modify the update button to give it an ID and a style class name. | |
| The ID is referenced by the inlineEditSupport component to show the button during editing. The style class name is used | |
| in styles.css to hide the update button the first time the page renders. Replace the commandButton with the following. | |
| <apex:commandButton id="update" action="{!quicksave}" value="Update Counts" | |
| styleclass="updateButton"/> | |
| 5. Your Visualforce markup should look like the following. | |
| <apex:page standardStylesheets="false" showHeader="false" sidebar="false" | |
| standardController="Merchandise__c" recordsetVar="products"> | |
| <apex:stylesheet value="{!URLFOR($Resource.styles, 'styles.css')}"/> | |
| <h1>Inventory Count Sheet</h1> | |
| <apex:form> | |
| <apex:dataTable value="{!products}" var="pitem" rowClasses="odd,even"> | |
| <apex:column headerValue="Product"> | |
| <apex:outputText value="{!pitem.name}"/> | |
| </apex:column> | |
| <apex:column headerValue="Inventory"> | |
| <apex:outputField value="{!pitem.Quantity__c}"> | |
| <apex:inlineEditSupport event="ondblclick" showOnEdit="update"/> | |
| </apex:outputField> | |
| </apex:column> | |
| </apex:dataTable> | |
| <br/> | |
| <apex:commandButton id="update" action="{!quicksave}" value="Update Counts" | |
| styleclass="updateButton"/> | |
| </apex:form> | |
| </apex:page> | |
| 6. Save. The page now displays the inventory count table with two columns. Notice that the Update Counts button is hidden initially. | |
| 7. Double-click any cell in the inventory column. The field dynamically becomes an input field and the Update Counts button appears. | |
| 8. Modify the count value and click Update Counts to commit this update. | |
| Tell Me More.... | |
| • The event attribute of the inlineEditSupport component is set to "ondblclick", which is a DOM event and means that | |
| the output field will be made editable when you double-click it. Also, the showOnEdit attribute causes the Update Counts button | |
| to appear on the page during an inline edit. This attribute is set to the ID of the Update Counts button. | |
| • The Update Counts button is hidden through its style specification in the static resource file styles.css. The styleclass | |
| attribute on commandButton links this button to an entry in styles.css. | |
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| Build a Custom User Interface with Visualforce | |
| Summary | |
| Summary | |
| Congratulations! You have created a new interface for your Warehouse app by creating a Visualforce page that uses a standard controller. | |
| Your page is highly configurable. For example, you can easily modify which data is displayed in each row by modifying the column | |
| components. The page also makes use of a lot of functionality provided by the standard controller behind the scenes. For example, the | |
| controller automatically queries the database and finds all merchandise records and assigns them to the products variable. It also | |
| provides a way of saving records, through its quicksave method. | |
| 133 | |