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You're reading from  Visualforce Development Cookbook

Product typeBook
Published inSep 2013
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781782170808
Edition1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1)
Keir Bowden
Keir Bowden
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Keir Bowden

Keir Bowden is a 30-year veteran of the IT industry from the United Kingdom. After spending the early part of his career in the defence industry, he moved into investment banking systems, implementing systems for Banque Nationale de Paris, CitiGroup, and Deutsche Bank. In the late 1990s, Keir moved into Internet technologies, leading to a development of the order management and payment handling systems of one of the first European Internet shopping sites. Keir started working with Force.com in late 2008 and has been recognized multiple times by Salesforce as an MVP for his contribution and leadership in the community. In 2012, he became the first certified technical architect outside of Salesforce in EMEA, and he has served as a judge on several EMEA Technical Architect Certification Review Boards. Keir is also a prominent blogger on Apex, Visualforce and Lightning Components solutions; and a regular speaker at events such as Dreamforce, Cloud World Forum, and Salesforce World Tour. Keir is a chief technical officer of BrightGena—a Salesforce.com Platinum Cloud Alliance Partner in the United Kingdom, where he is responsible for the present and future technical strategies. Keir acted as a technical reviewer for the CRM Admin Cookbook before accepting the challenge of authoring this book, which also happens to be his first.
Read more about Keir Bowden

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Pressing Enter to submit


When the Enter key is pressed and a single-line HTML form element has focus, modern browsers will submit the form via the first submit button. If the user has pressed the Enter key expecting to move on to a new line and remain in the input element, this can lead to the submission of a partially filled in form, resulting in a low quality record being created.

In this recipe we will create a Visualforce page that allows a user to create an opportunity. If the user presses the Enter key while filling in any of the opportunity fields, they will be asked to confirm that they wish to submit the form.

Getting ready

This recipe makes use of a standard controller, so we only need to create the Visualforce page.

How to do it…

  1. Create the Visualforce page by navigating to the Visualforce setup page by clicking on Your Name | Setup | Develop | Pages.

  2. Click on the New button.

  3. Enter PressEnter in the Label field.

  4. Accept the default PressEnter that is automatically generated for the Name...

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You have been reading a chapter from
Visualforce Development Cookbook
Published in: Sep 2013Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781782170808

Author (1)

author image
Keir Bowden

Keir Bowden is a 30-year veteran of the IT industry from the United Kingdom. After spending the early part of his career in the defence industry, he moved into investment banking systems, implementing systems for Banque Nationale de Paris, CitiGroup, and Deutsche Bank. In the late 1990s, Keir moved into Internet technologies, leading to a development of the order management and payment handling systems of one of the first European Internet shopping sites. Keir started working with Force.com in late 2008 and has been recognized multiple times by Salesforce as an MVP for his contribution and leadership in the community. In 2012, he became the first certified technical architect outside of Salesforce in EMEA, and he has served as a judge on several EMEA Technical Architect Certification Review Boards. Keir is also a prominent blogger on Apex, Visualforce and Lightning Components solutions; and a regular speaker at events such as Dreamforce, Cloud World Forum, and Salesforce World Tour. Keir is a chief technical officer of BrightGena—a Salesforce.com Platinum Cloud Alliance Partner in the United Kingdom, where he is responsible for the present and future technical strategies. Keir acted as a technical reviewer for the CRM Admin Cookbook before accepting the challenge of authoring this book, which also happens to be his first.
Read more about Keir Bowden