Hey Adam, I'm new to Flows and quickly trying to skill up. Loops were really confusing to me UNTIL I found this video! They make so much more sense now. Great content and keep 'em coming!
One of the best, if not the best tutorial on flows. I have been scouring youtube for Salesforce flow content. This is the first video I have seen from Adam, I am excited to watch others. My initial reaction is, for how good this is I am shocked that Adam only has 1.85k subs. The content and production is amazing. Keep it up Adam!!!
haha - hilarious! I'm obsessed with his videos. Even when I'm not looking for a new car I check a few of them out. My dream video job - car reviews :) If you know him put in a good word please :D
Great video! Was wondering if loops can be created for opportunity line item schedules? I have revenue schedule enabled and want to loop through each item in the schedule and do stuff with it
Hello! thanks for the comments. To be honest I've not had much experience with Revenue Schedules and actually don't think it's something I've come across a client actually using. The problem is that most of the clients I've worked with have separate billing/invoicing systems that deal with when the client is charged for services. There are also limitation to what you can do as well, but as with all things, depends on your use case and how you need it. Sorry I can't help more. I would suspect you can do it with flows. Try it out with a simple update and see where you get. Just need to ensure you find the right object name for it. Thanks again :)
Great question - so to be honest I've often wondered myself. I'm sure there is a far cleverer person who will say why, but I've done both before and both seem to work. I think most people do it by assigning to a table of data as an output then deal with it in one go. I also think therein lies the answer too, that if you're working with large amounts of data, it may hit some limits doing it one by one because it can't be executed in batches/asynchronously. If you update all of them in one update job then it might perform better. Again, I've found both seem to work. Let me know what you find.