Exam Salesforce-MuleSoft-Developer-I Topic 4 Question 71 Discussion
Actual exam question for Salesforce's Salesforce-MuleSoft-Developer-I exam
Question #: 71
Topic #: 4
Question #: 71
Topic #: 4
A Utlility.dwl is located in a Mule project at src/main/resources/modules. The Utility.dwl file defines a function named encryptString that encrypts a String What is the correct DataWeave to call the encryptString function in a Transform Message component?
Suggested Answer: B Vote an answer
Correct answer is
%dw 2.0
output application/json
import modules::Utility
---
Utility::encryptString( "John Smith" )
DataWeave 2.0 functions are packaged in modules. Before you begin, note that DataWeave 2.0 is for Mule 4 apps. For Mule 3 apps, refer to DataWeave Operators in the Mule 3.9 documentation. For other Mule versions, you can use the version selector for the Mule Runtime table of contents.
Functions in the Core (dw::Core) module are imported automatically into your DataWeave scripts. To use other modules, you need to import the module or functions you want to use by adding the import directive to the head of your DataWeave script, for example:
import dw::core::Strings
import camelize, capitalize from dw::core::Strings
import * from dw::core::Strings
The way you import a module impacts the way you need to call its functions from a DataWeave script. If the directive does not list specific functions to import or use * from to import all functions from a function module, you need to specify the module when you call the function from your script. For example, this import directive does not identify any functions to import from the String module, so it calls the pluralize function like this: Strings::pluralize("box").
Transform
%dw 2.0
import dw::core::Strings
output application/json
---
{ 'plural': Strings::pluralize("box") }
%dw 2.0
output application/json
import modules::Utility
---
Utility::encryptString( "John Smith" )
DataWeave 2.0 functions are packaged in modules. Before you begin, note that DataWeave 2.0 is for Mule 4 apps. For Mule 3 apps, refer to DataWeave Operators in the Mule 3.9 documentation. For other Mule versions, you can use the version selector for the Mule Runtime table of contents.
Functions in the Core (dw::Core) module are imported automatically into your DataWeave scripts. To use other modules, you need to import the module or functions you want to use by adding the import directive to the head of your DataWeave script, for example:
import dw::core::Strings
import camelize, capitalize from dw::core::Strings
import * from dw::core::Strings
The way you import a module impacts the way you need to call its functions from a DataWeave script. If the directive does not list specific functions to import or use * from to import all functions from a function module, you need to specify the module when you call the function from your script. For example, this import directive does not identify any functions to import from the String module, so it calls the pluralize function like this: Strings::pluralize("box").
Transform
%dw 2.0
import dw::core::Strings
output application/json
---
{ 'plural': Strings::pluralize("box") }
by tala at Oct 06, 2024, 05:21 AM
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tala
2024-10-06 05:21:30Upvoting a comment with a selected answer will also increase the vote count towards that answer by one. So if you see a comment that you already agree with, you can upvote it instead of posting a new comment.
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