What's the API name of system permissions?












4














I am adding the system permissions 'Manage Public List Views' and 'Create and Customize List Views' to a permission set via the Metadata API. The problem is I can't find their exact API name:



<userPermissions>
<enabled>true</enabled>
<name>CreateCustomizeListViews</name>
</userPermissions>
<userPermissions>
<enabled>true</enabled>
<name>ManagePublicListViews</name>
</userPermissions>


... this is what I have which seems right, but I want to be absolutely sure. Are you supposed to have the 'and' in there? Previously there was a permission here that read:



<userPermissions>
<enabled>true</enabled>
<name>CreateCustomizeFilters</name>
</userPermissions>


... so that's why I named 'Create Customize List Views' that way.










share|improve this question





























    4














    I am adding the system permissions 'Manage Public List Views' and 'Create and Customize List Views' to a permission set via the Metadata API. The problem is I can't find their exact API name:



    <userPermissions>
    <enabled>true</enabled>
    <name>CreateCustomizeListViews</name>
    </userPermissions>
    <userPermissions>
    <enabled>true</enabled>
    <name>ManagePublicListViews</name>
    </userPermissions>


    ... this is what I have which seems right, but I want to be absolutely sure. Are you supposed to have the 'and' in there? Previously there was a permission here that read:



    <userPermissions>
    <enabled>true</enabled>
    <name>CreateCustomizeFilters</name>
    </userPermissions>


    ... so that's why I named 'Create Customize List Views' that way.










    share|improve this question



























      4












      4








      4







      I am adding the system permissions 'Manage Public List Views' and 'Create and Customize List Views' to a permission set via the Metadata API. The problem is I can't find their exact API name:



      <userPermissions>
      <enabled>true</enabled>
      <name>CreateCustomizeListViews</name>
      </userPermissions>
      <userPermissions>
      <enabled>true</enabled>
      <name>ManagePublicListViews</name>
      </userPermissions>


      ... this is what I have which seems right, but I want to be absolutely sure. Are you supposed to have the 'and' in there? Previously there was a permission here that read:



      <userPermissions>
      <enabled>true</enabled>
      <name>CreateCustomizeFilters</name>
      </userPermissions>


      ... so that's why I named 'Create Customize List Views' that way.










      share|improve this question















      I am adding the system permissions 'Manage Public List Views' and 'Create and Customize List Views' to a permission set via the Metadata API. The problem is I can't find their exact API name:



      <userPermissions>
      <enabled>true</enabled>
      <name>CreateCustomizeListViews</name>
      </userPermissions>
      <userPermissions>
      <enabled>true</enabled>
      <name>ManagePublicListViews</name>
      </userPermissions>


      ... this is what I have which seems right, but I want to be absolutely sure. Are you supposed to have the 'and' in there? Previously there was a permission here that read:



      <userPermissions>
      <enabled>true</enabled>
      <name>CreateCustomizeFilters</name>
      </userPermissions>


      ... so that's why I named 'Create Customize List Views' that way.







      metadata-api






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Dec 10 '18 at 20:32









      Peter Mortensen

      24317




      24317










      asked Dec 10 '18 at 18:48









      SallyRothroat

      372113




      372113






















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          6














          Metadata API sometimes have different API names than the one shown on the UI.



          Manage Public List Views permission is called as "EditPublicFilters" and Create and Customize List Views is called as "CreateCustomizeFilters"



          So your user permission will be.



              <userPermissions>
          <enabled>true</enabled>
          <name>CreateCustomizeFilters</name>
          </userPermissions>
          <userPermissions>
          <enabled>true</enabled>
          <name>EditPublicFilters</name>
          </userPermissions>





          share|improve this answer





















          • aha thanks! why is it like that, that's dumb
            – SallyRothroat
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:14






          • 1




            This is the core base of Salesforce which was designed in 2000's , probably when they designed they didnt want to name it as "List View" and keep it as Filter. SF Over the years they renamed the Lable to ListView but kept the API name as same for backward compatibility,
            – Pranay Jaiswal
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:16





















          6














          The best place to check for it is the workbench.



          Enter image description here



          Reference: API Names of System and App Permissions?






          share|improve this answer



















          • 1




            Its weird, The one I pulled via Ant has value "CreateCustomizeFilters" where as from the API it says PermissionsCreateCustomizeFilters , Unless Permissions is a prefix
            – Pranay Jaiswal
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:18






          • 1




            @PranayJaiswal I guess that might be it!
            – codeyinthecloud
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:20






          • 4




            @PranayJaiswal Yes, the workbench returns the "SOAP" version of the Profile, which is where the "Permissions" prefix comes from. And it's in the docs for the Profile sobject in the SOAP API, too.
            – sfdcfox
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:21










          • @sfdcfox got it. Now makes sense.
            – Pranay Jaiswal
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:23











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          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes








          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          6














          Metadata API sometimes have different API names than the one shown on the UI.



          Manage Public List Views permission is called as "EditPublicFilters" and Create and Customize List Views is called as "CreateCustomizeFilters"



          So your user permission will be.



              <userPermissions>
          <enabled>true</enabled>
          <name>CreateCustomizeFilters</name>
          </userPermissions>
          <userPermissions>
          <enabled>true</enabled>
          <name>EditPublicFilters</name>
          </userPermissions>





          share|improve this answer





















          • aha thanks! why is it like that, that's dumb
            – SallyRothroat
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:14






          • 1




            This is the core base of Salesforce which was designed in 2000's , probably when they designed they didnt want to name it as "List View" and keep it as Filter. SF Over the years they renamed the Lable to ListView but kept the API name as same for backward compatibility,
            – Pranay Jaiswal
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:16


















          6














          Metadata API sometimes have different API names than the one shown on the UI.



          Manage Public List Views permission is called as "EditPublicFilters" and Create and Customize List Views is called as "CreateCustomizeFilters"



          So your user permission will be.



              <userPermissions>
          <enabled>true</enabled>
          <name>CreateCustomizeFilters</name>
          </userPermissions>
          <userPermissions>
          <enabled>true</enabled>
          <name>EditPublicFilters</name>
          </userPermissions>





          share|improve this answer





















          • aha thanks! why is it like that, that's dumb
            – SallyRothroat
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:14






          • 1




            This is the core base of Salesforce which was designed in 2000's , probably when they designed they didnt want to name it as "List View" and keep it as Filter. SF Over the years they renamed the Lable to ListView but kept the API name as same for backward compatibility,
            – Pranay Jaiswal
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:16
















          6












          6








          6






          Metadata API sometimes have different API names than the one shown on the UI.



          Manage Public List Views permission is called as "EditPublicFilters" and Create and Customize List Views is called as "CreateCustomizeFilters"



          So your user permission will be.



              <userPermissions>
          <enabled>true</enabled>
          <name>CreateCustomizeFilters</name>
          </userPermissions>
          <userPermissions>
          <enabled>true</enabled>
          <name>EditPublicFilters</name>
          </userPermissions>





          share|improve this answer












          Metadata API sometimes have different API names than the one shown on the UI.



          Manage Public List Views permission is called as "EditPublicFilters" and Create and Customize List Views is called as "CreateCustomizeFilters"



          So your user permission will be.



              <userPermissions>
          <enabled>true</enabled>
          <name>CreateCustomizeFilters</name>
          </userPermissions>
          <userPermissions>
          <enabled>true</enabled>
          <name>EditPublicFilters</name>
          </userPermissions>






          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Dec 10 '18 at 19:12









          Pranay Jaiswal

          13.6k32351




          13.6k32351












          • aha thanks! why is it like that, that's dumb
            – SallyRothroat
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:14






          • 1




            This is the core base of Salesforce which was designed in 2000's , probably when they designed they didnt want to name it as "List View" and keep it as Filter. SF Over the years they renamed the Lable to ListView but kept the API name as same for backward compatibility,
            – Pranay Jaiswal
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:16




















          • aha thanks! why is it like that, that's dumb
            – SallyRothroat
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:14






          • 1




            This is the core base of Salesforce which was designed in 2000's , probably when they designed they didnt want to name it as "List View" and keep it as Filter. SF Over the years they renamed the Lable to ListView but kept the API name as same for backward compatibility,
            – Pranay Jaiswal
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:16


















          aha thanks! why is it like that, that's dumb
          – SallyRothroat
          Dec 10 '18 at 19:14




          aha thanks! why is it like that, that's dumb
          – SallyRothroat
          Dec 10 '18 at 19:14




          1




          1




          This is the core base of Salesforce which was designed in 2000's , probably when they designed they didnt want to name it as "List View" and keep it as Filter. SF Over the years they renamed the Lable to ListView but kept the API name as same for backward compatibility,
          – Pranay Jaiswal
          Dec 10 '18 at 19:16






          This is the core base of Salesforce which was designed in 2000's , probably when they designed they didnt want to name it as "List View" and keep it as Filter. SF Over the years they renamed the Lable to ListView but kept the API name as same for backward compatibility,
          – Pranay Jaiswal
          Dec 10 '18 at 19:16















          6














          The best place to check for it is the workbench.



          Enter image description here



          Reference: API Names of System and App Permissions?






          share|improve this answer



















          • 1




            Its weird, The one I pulled via Ant has value "CreateCustomizeFilters" where as from the API it says PermissionsCreateCustomizeFilters , Unless Permissions is a prefix
            – Pranay Jaiswal
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:18






          • 1




            @PranayJaiswal I guess that might be it!
            – codeyinthecloud
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:20






          • 4




            @PranayJaiswal Yes, the workbench returns the "SOAP" version of the Profile, which is where the "Permissions" prefix comes from. And it's in the docs for the Profile sobject in the SOAP API, too.
            – sfdcfox
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:21










          • @sfdcfox got it. Now makes sense.
            – Pranay Jaiswal
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:23
















          6














          The best place to check for it is the workbench.



          Enter image description here



          Reference: API Names of System and App Permissions?






          share|improve this answer



















          • 1




            Its weird, The one I pulled via Ant has value "CreateCustomizeFilters" where as from the API it says PermissionsCreateCustomizeFilters , Unless Permissions is a prefix
            – Pranay Jaiswal
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:18






          • 1




            @PranayJaiswal I guess that might be it!
            – codeyinthecloud
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:20






          • 4




            @PranayJaiswal Yes, the workbench returns the "SOAP" version of the Profile, which is where the "Permissions" prefix comes from. And it's in the docs for the Profile sobject in the SOAP API, too.
            – sfdcfox
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:21










          • @sfdcfox got it. Now makes sense.
            – Pranay Jaiswal
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:23














          6












          6








          6






          The best place to check for it is the workbench.



          Enter image description here



          Reference: API Names of System and App Permissions?






          share|improve this answer














          The best place to check for it is the workbench.



          Enter image description here



          Reference: API Names of System and App Permissions?







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Dec 10 '18 at 19:58









          Peter Mortensen

          24317




          24317










          answered Dec 10 '18 at 19:15









          codeyinthecloud

          3,2991423




          3,2991423








          • 1




            Its weird, The one I pulled via Ant has value "CreateCustomizeFilters" where as from the API it says PermissionsCreateCustomizeFilters , Unless Permissions is a prefix
            – Pranay Jaiswal
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:18






          • 1




            @PranayJaiswal I guess that might be it!
            – codeyinthecloud
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:20






          • 4




            @PranayJaiswal Yes, the workbench returns the "SOAP" version of the Profile, which is where the "Permissions" prefix comes from. And it's in the docs for the Profile sobject in the SOAP API, too.
            – sfdcfox
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:21










          • @sfdcfox got it. Now makes sense.
            – Pranay Jaiswal
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:23














          • 1




            Its weird, The one I pulled via Ant has value "CreateCustomizeFilters" where as from the API it says PermissionsCreateCustomizeFilters , Unless Permissions is a prefix
            – Pranay Jaiswal
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:18






          • 1




            @PranayJaiswal I guess that might be it!
            – codeyinthecloud
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:20






          • 4




            @PranayJaiswal Yes, the workbench returns the "SOAP" version of the Profile, which is where the "Permissions" prefix comes from. And it's in the docs for the Profile sobject in the SOAP API, too.
            – sfdcfox
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:21










          • @sfdcfox got it. Now makes sense.
            – Pranay Jaiswal
            Dec 10 '18 at 19:23








          1




          1




          Its weird, The one I pulled via Ant has value "CreateCustomizeFilters" where as from the API it says PermissionsCreateCustomizeFilters , Unless Permissions is a prefix
          – Pranay Jaiswal
          Dec 10 '18 at 19:18




          Its weird, The one I pulled via Ant has value "CreateCustomizeFilters" where as from the API it says PermissionsCreateCustomizeFilters , Unless Permissions is a prefix
          – Pranay Jaiswal
          Dec 10 '18 at 19:18




          1




          1




          @PranayJaiswal I guess that might be it!
          – codeyinthecloud
          Dec 10 '18 at 19:20




          @PranayJaiswal I guess that might be it!
          – codeyinthecloud
          Dec 10 '18 at 19:20




          4




          4




          @PranayJaiswal Yes, the workbench returns the "SOAP" version of the Profile, which is where the "Permissions" prefix comes from. And it's in the docs for the Profile sobject in the SOAP API, too.
          – sfdcfox
          Dec 10 '18 at 19:21




          @PranayJaiswal Yes, the workbench returns the "SOAP" version of the Profile, which is where the "Permissions" prefix comes from. And it's in the docs for the Profile sobject in the SOAP API, too.
          – sfdcfox
          Dec 10 '18 at 19:21












          @sfdcfox got it. Now makes sense.
          – Pranay Jaiswal
          Dec 10 '18 at 19:23




          @sfdcfox got it. Now makes sense.
          – Pranay Jaiswal
          Dec 10 '18 at 19:23


















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