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Lightning Experience Basics. Discover how Lightning Experience benefits your business and learn how to launch it to your Salesforce users. Salesforce Platform is the app development platform that extends your CRM’s reach and functionality. You do not have to be a developer to build apps using the Salesforce Platform. With drag-and-drop simplicity, just about anyone can create apps that automate business processes or help customers find important information. Describes how to use Data Loader, which is a client application for the bulk import or export of data. Use it to insert, update, delete, or export Salesforce or Database.com records.
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If you’re developing Salesforce Lightning components you’ll probably reach a stage where you get fed up of using the Dev Console. Right now the Eclipse based IDE doesn’t support lightning and Joe Ferraro is still working on the latest updates to MavensMate.
One option is to use Dave Carrol‘s Lightning Tools plugin for Sublime Text. I had a bit of a headache getting this to work on my Mac and with a bit of googling have finally succeeded so I just wanted to wrap it all up here.
Firstly I’m using Sublime Text 3 with MavensMate v6 installed on a Mac running El Capitan. So I’m assuming you’re at the same starting point.
- Firstly you need to install the plugin:
- Open Sublime Text.
- Open the menu: Suplime Text -> Preferences -> Package Control
- Select: Package Control: Install Package
- Enter lightning when prompted.
- Ignore the error: Sublime Lightning Plugin requires the Force.com CLI to function
- Quit Sublime.
- Next you’ll need the Force.com Command Line Interface:
- Download Force.com CLI from here: https://force-cli.heroku.com/
- Save it somewhere and make a note of the path.
- Create a symbolic link to Sublime in /usr/local/bin:
- Open Terminal.
- Enter the command:
sudo ln -s “/Applications/Sublime Text.app/Contents/SharedSupport/bin/subl” /usr/local/bin/subl
- Create a symbolic link to the Force.com CLI in /usr/local/bin:
- Open Terminal.
- Enter the command:
sudo ln -s /mypath/force /usr/local/bin/force
(replace /mypath with the path you saved the Force.com CLI in)
- Run sublime from the Terminal:
- Open Terminal
- Enter the command:
subl - You should no longer get the error: Sublime Lightning Plugin requires the Force.com CLI to function
- Use the Lightning right-click context menu on your Salesforce project to Login and work with your lightning components.
The extra hoops are because Sublime requires the tools to be available in the path. If you launch Sublime outside of Terminal the path is ignored and the error message is generated.
There is a sublime text plugin that allows the path to be specified called SublimeFixMacPath but I couldn’t get it to work in El Capitan.
While it’s not exactly elegant launching from the command line it’s a reasonable workaround for now.
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Tagged with: force.com, ide, productivity, salesforce, sublime, tools
Posted in code, force.com, salesforce
Posted in code, force.com, salesforce