The Silver Lining

Lessons & Learnings from a salesforce certified technical architect.

Archive for June 2011

Salesforce: A better way to work with jQuery selectors and Visualforce Component Ids

with 24 comments

Irregular Expressions

I get very sad when discussing this particular topic. There are a variety of ways of get Visualforce component Ids and using them in JavaScript but all of them keep me awake at night. Srsly. A commenter on one of my posts got me thinking about how we can do this better and I’ve come up with a way that I think is great. Hopefully you’ll agree.

This post means that my older posts here and here are now retired in favour of this method.

If the world was on the brink of nuclear war with no clear path to peace what could you count on to save the day? Regular Expressions of course. If a meteor the size of Pluto was about to crash into Earth and Bruce Willis was too old to land on it and blow it up what could we count on to rid us of the troublesome rock. Yes that’s right, Regular Expressions. I think you can guess where I’m going with this.

jQuery has the ability to understand very simple regular expressions in it’s attribute selectors. The full documentation can be found here.

To solve our particular problem however the code is simple:

<apex:page>
    <head>
        <style>
            a,span{
                display:block;
            }
        </style>

        <script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4.2/jquery.min.js"></script>

        <script>
           jQuery(document).ready(function($){
               $('#btn').click(function(e){
                   e.preventDefault();

                   console.log('The following element was found when looking for an id of \'output1\':');
                   console.log($('[id$=output1]')); /* Here's where we're grabbing the element. */
               });
           });
        </script>

    </head>

  <apex:outputText value="She sells seashells by the seashore." id="output1"/>
  <apex:outputText value="Peter Piper picked a pack of pickled peppers." id="output2"/>

  <a href="" id="btn">Click me.</a>

</apex:page>

The important part here is the selector $(‘[id$=output1]’) which says, “Find the id value that ends with ‘output1′”. This comes with a warning though! Do not duplicate the Visualforce Id that you give to your elements otherwise this piece of code will find all of them.

When I first wrote this post I used a selector extension library that gives you the full power of JavaScript-based regular expression but Ryan Fritts has rightly shown that the above will deal with 99% of use cases and is simpler. For those of you that need to deal with the extra 1% I’ve implemented a wrapper to regex selector as an example. It does exactly what jQuery is doing above and gives you access to the regex flags as documented here.

Thanks again Ryan!

Written by Wes

June 24, 2011 at 2:36 pm

Cloud Computing World Forum Presentation

with 6 comments

This afternoon I gave a talk on the evolution of the cloud at the 3rd annual Cloud Computing World Forum in London. For those who attended (or anyone else!) here’s the slide deck.

Written by Wes

June 21, 2011 at 4:10 pm

Posted in SalesForce

How many Salesforce Roles do you have in your Org?

with 8 comments

I’ve worked with many Org instances in my career with salesforce.com and the Force.com Platform and was stunned by an Org that had a massive number of Roles, way beyond anything I’d ever seen before. This made me curious as to what other people were dealing with and I’m sure the result will be interesting.

Note: If you work with several Orgs and you have a high tolerance for boredom please submit an answer for each 🙂

Written by Wes

June 17, 2011 at 1:29 pm

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