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Salesforce Platform Developer I Certification Guide

Salesforce Platform Developer I Certification Guide

By : Jan Vandevelde, Gunther Roskams
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Salesforce Platform Developer I Certification Guide

Salesforce Platform Developer I Certification Guide

By: Jan Vandevelde, Gunther Roskams

Overview of this book

Salesforce Lightning Platform, used to build enterprise apps, is being increasingly adopted by admins, business analysts, consultants, architects, and especially developers. With this Salesforce certification, you'll be able to enhance your development skills and become a valuable member of your organization. This certification guide is designed to be completely aligned with the official exam study guide for the latest Salesforce Certified Platform Developer I release and includes updates from Spring '19. Starting with Salesforce fundamentals and performing data modeling and management, you’ll progress to automating logic and processes and working on user interfaces with Salesforce components. Finally, you'll learn how to work with testing frameworks, perform debugging, and deploy metadata, and get to grips with useful tips and tricks. Each chapter concludes with sample questions that are commonly found in the exam, and the book wraps up with mock tests to help you prepare for the DEV501 certification exam. By the end of the book, you’ll be ready to take the exam and earn your Salesforce Certified Platform Developer I certification.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
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Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Fundamentals, Data Modeling, and Management
4
Section 2: Logic, Process Automation, and the User Interface
9
Section 3: Testing, Debugging, and Exercise
12
Mock Tests

What is multi-tenancy?

When I try to explain multi-tenancy to my customers, I always compare it to an apartment block.

For example, consider a scenario, where you – as a company or a customer – rent an apartment in a block that is owned by Salesforce, who is your landlord:

Here, your apartment has specific layouts and resources – that is, it has a number of rooms divided by walls. In addition to this, it has central heating, electricity, water, and more. To access and use this apartment, you pay a monthly rent, and everything else is taken care of for you and the other occupants in the building by your landlord.

Apart from your apartment (which is your private space), all the other resources are shared by the occupants of the building. This means that if Salesforce decides to upgrade the central heating to underfloor heating, then you will automatically benefit...

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