Best Practice to write Apex
Triggers in Salesforce
1)One Trigger Per Object
A single Apex Trigger is all you need for one particular object. If you develop
multiple Triggers for a single object, you have no way of controlling the order
of execution if those Triggers can run in the same contexts
2) Logic-less Triggers
If you write methods in your Triggers, those can’t be exposed for test
purposes. You also can’t expose logic to be re-used anywhere else in your org.
3) Context-Specific Handler Methods
Create context-specific handler methods in Trigger handlers
4) Bulkify your Code
Bulkifying Apex code refers to the concept of making sure the code properly
handles more than one record at a time.
5) Avoid SOQL Queries or DML statements inside FOR Loops
An individual Apex request gets a maximum of 100 SOQL queries before exceeding
that governor limit. So if this trigger is invoked by a batch of more than 100
Account records, the governor limit will throw a runtime exception
6) Using Collections, Streamlining Queries, and Efficient For Loops
It is important to use Apex Collections to efficiently query data and store the
data in memory. A combination of using collections and streamlining SOQL
queries can substantially help writing efficient Apex code and avoid governor
limits
7) Querying Large Data Sets
The total number of records that can be returned by SOQL queries in a request
is 50,000. If returning a large set of queries causes you to exceed your heap
limit, then a SOQL query for loop must be used instead. It can process multiple
batches of records through the use of internal calls to query and queryMore
8) Use @future Appropriately
It is critical to write your Apex code to efficiently handle bulk or many
records at a time. This is also true for asynchronous Apex methods (those
annotated with the @future keyword). The differences between synchronous and
asynchronous Apex can be found
9) Avoid Hardcoding IDs
When deploying Apex code between sandbox and production environments, or
installing Force.com AppExchange packages, it is essential to avoid hardcoding IDs in
the Apex code. By doing so, if the record IDs change between environments, the
logic can dynamically identify the proper data to operate against and not fail
Always remember below points before writing trigger :-
1) Order Of Execution
2) Recursive Trigger
Thanks for Reading!
Author
Techsouring Salesforce Mentors
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