Scenario 1 and its solution
When you have a hybrid list, make sure that the objects are not scattered without any order. For example, A,B,A,B,A,B,A,B…. Salesforce has an inherent trouble in switching sObject types for more than 10 times. They call this switching limit as Chunking Limit. So, on this hybrid list, if you would have sorted it and then passed it for DML, Salesforce would have been much happier. For example. A,A,A,A,B,B,B,B… In this case, salesforce only has to switch one time (that is read all A objects –>switch –> read all B objects). The max chunk limit is 10. So, here we are safe.
listToUpdate.sort();
UPDATE listToUpdate;
Scenario 2 and its solution
Another point that we have to bear in our mind is that if the hybrid list contains more number of objects for one type, we can run into TypeException. As mentioned in the screenshot, if list contains 1001 objects of type A and 1001 objects of type B, then total objects is equal to 2002. The maximum chunks allowed is 10. So, if you do a simple math, the number of objects in each chunk would be 2002/10 = 200. Salesforce also enforces another governor limit that each chunk should not contain 200 or more than 200 objects. In this case, we will have to foresee how much objects are possible to enter this code and we have to write code to pass lists of safe size for DML every time.
Scenario 3 and its solution
Scenario 3 and its solution
Third scenario that can happen is if the hybrid list contains objects of more than 10 types, then even if the size of the list if very small, switching happens when salesforce reads different sObject. So, we have to make sure that in this case, we allot separate lists for each sObject type and then pass it on for DML. Doing this in an apex trigger or apex class would cause you some trouble as multiple DML’s are initiated in a context. Passing this kind of multiple sObject lists for DML operations in a different context would really ease up the load you pump into the platform. Consider doing this kind of logic in a Batch Apex Job rather than a apex trigger or apex class.
Hope this helps.