Data dictionary

Browse, search, and export every object and field in your Salesforce org.

The data dictionary is a live, searchable view of your org's schema. Every object and field is documented automatically from your metadata — nothing to write by hand, and it stays current as your org changes.

Built from metadata

The dictionary describes your org's structure — objects, fields, relationships, and their configuration. It never reads, stores, or shows record data.

Objects

The Objects list shows every object in your org and is searchable. Custom and standard objects are distinguished, so you can quickly narrow to the ones you maintain — for example, jumping straight to your custom Account.Industry__c-style fields by starting at their parent object.

Inside an object

Open any object to see its full definition, organized into tabs:

Fields

Every field on the object, with its type and configuration.

Impact

What breaks if you change or delete the object — the automations, layouts, and other components that depend on it.

Relationships

What the object looks up to, and what references it back.

Record Types

Record types defined on the object.

Validation Rules

The rules that gate writes to the object.

Layouts

Page layouts defined for the object.

Automations

Flows and Apex triggers that run on the object — definitions only, never the records they touch.

Change history

Schema changes recorded for this object over time.

The Change history tab ties the dictionary to change tracking: you can see an object's current definition and how it got there from the same place.

Ask about this object

From any object you can Ask about this object to open the assistant already scoped to it — useful for "what changed here lately?" or "which fields are barely used?" without leaving the page.

Inside a field

Open any field to see its complete definition:

AttributeWhat it shows
Data typeThe field's type
FlagsWhether the field is required, unique, an external ID, or calculated
GovernanceA badge when the field looks like it holds personal data — see PII detection
Population %How often the field is filled in — see field usage
ImpactWhat would break if you changed or deleted the field — see impact analysis
Field-level securityWho can see and edit the field, by profile and permission set — see permissions
DescriptionThe field's description
Help textThe field's help text
Field meaningIts purpose, synonyms, and category
Picklist valuesThe values available on a picklist field
Value setThe value set a picklist draws from — see value sets
Change historyHow the field's definition has changed over time — see change tracking

Description and help text

A field's description and help text are synced from Salesforce as-is. Where a field has none, SchemaForce can draft one for you — those AI-authored descriptions are clearly marked, and you can optionally push an accepted draft back to Salesforce one field at a time. See AI documentation & Push to Salesforce.

Governance badges are a heuristic

A Governance badge flags fields that look like they hold personal data — it's a signal to review, not a compliance verdict. PII detection explains what it checks and what it deliberately doesn't.

Global search spans both objects and fields, so you can jump straight to what you need without knowing where it lives. Type part of a label or API name and go directly to the matching object or field.

Two different searches

The dictionary search above finds objects and fields. The command palette (⌘K / Ctrl-K) is a separate, keyboard-driven way to jump to any object or page from anywhere in the app.

Value Sets

The Value Sets page lists global and standard picklist value sets, along with which fields use each one. This is useful for understanding shared picklists across the org — when several fields draw from the same value set, you can see them all in one place before changing it.

Export

Any dictionary table can be exported, so the documentation doesn't have to live only in SchemaForce.

Export to CSV for spreadsheets, audits, or sharing a snapshot with colleagues.

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