The Wiert Corner – irregular stream of stuff

Jeroen W. Pluimers on .NET, C#, Delphi, databases, and personal interests

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Archive for the ‘Delphi’ Category

Delphi prebuild/prelink/postbuild events

Posted by jpluimers on 2014/11/20

Ever since the Delphi build engine got changed to MS Build in Delphi 2007, many people use Delphi build events. Their order is prebuild, prelink and postbuild (or maybe better spelled pre-build, pre-link and post-build).

Before Delphi 2007, you had to fiddler with project groups and dependencies to fake pre-build and post-build events. For an example see Pre and Post-Build Automation in Delphi.

One of the really good things about these events is that build events appear in the output tab of the messages window.

One of the really bad things is that there is hardly any documentation about the build events.

At least two important things are missing:

  1. How the lines of a build event are actually executed
  2. How parameter expansion works inside build events

Let’s explain these. Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Conference Topics, Conferences, Delphi, Delphi 2005, Delphi 2006, Delphi 2007, Delphi 2009, Delphi 2010, Delphi XE, Delphi XE2, Delphi XE3, Delphi XE4, Delphi XE5, Development, Event, FastMM, QC, Software Development | 5 Comments »

Delphi XE, Windows Theming, your DPR and the Project Options in the IDE

Posted by jpluimers on 2014/11/19

A while ago I bumped into a funny problem with Delphi XE.

I moved all the code from the .dpr in a Main unit (the IDE sometimes overwrites part of the DPR).

This normally isn’t a problem, until Delphi re-generates the .RES file. The reason is that this .RES file can contain a manifest which enables Windows theming.

If there is no reference of the Application object in the .DPR, the IDE will remove the Theming manifest from the .RES file, so your application run unthemed.

Three solutions: Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Delphi, Delphi XE, Delphi XE2, Delphi XE3, Delphi XE4, Delphi XE5, Development, Software Development | 6 Comments »

Delphi Research list: TXMLDocument binding for OmniXML (via: Stack Overflow)

Posted by jpluimers on 2014/11/18

This should not be difficult to do, just time consuming. So it is on my research list to see how time consuming: build a TXMLDocument binding for OmniXML.

This is to urge less people to try to parse XML by hand like xml – Copy & Copy does not work correctly with stringlist – Stack Overflow.

–jeroen

via: Delphi, OmniXML – XML binding? – Stack Overflow.

Posted in Delphi, Delphi XE4, Delphi XE5, Development, Software Development, XML/XSD | 13 Comments »

JCL & JVCL – What are the Real Gems in these Tool Sets

Posted by jpluimers on 2014/11/13

Steve Maughan posted a great question on G+ last week:

JCL & JVCL – What are the Real Gems in these Tool Sets

The resulting thread is full of people answering with their favorite JVCL and JCL gems.

Recommended reading!

–jeroen

via JCL & JVCL – What are the Real Gems in these Tool Sets I’ve just installed JCL….

Posted in Delphi, Delphi 2005, Delphi 2006, Delphi 2007, Delphi 2009, Delphi 2010, Delphi x64, Delphi XE, Delphi XE2, Delphi XE3, Delphi XE4, Delphi XE5, Delphi XE6, Delphi XE7, Development, Software Development | 1 Comment »

BeSharp.net: PowerShell script to show the component packages (BPL) files for all installed Delphi (actually: BDS) versions.

Posted by jpluimers on 2014/11/13

A while ago, I wrote a via PowerShell script to show the component packages (BPL) files for all installed Delphi (actually: BDS) versions (now at List-Delphi-Installed-Packages.ps1) for a couple of reasons:

  • I was creating installation instructions for getting new development machines set-up
  • The new machines had to either have a minimum subset of installed Delphi versions  + components, or the maximum superset of all the existing development machines
  • Sifting through the installed Packages in the IDE, or registry by hand was cumbersome

Note that in the mean time (I queued this blog entry somewhere in 2013) the script has moved to BitBucket, I’ve written more scripts (like Dependencies.bat which is documented in Dependencies.md and Run-Dependend-rsvars-From-Path.bat), all modified all scripts to support all BDS versions I had access to, and a write nice conference paper on Build Automation for Delphi that references the scripts.

Since none of the machines were using pre BDS installations, I could limit the script to BDS 1.0 and up.

The very first (1.0) version of BDS (also known as the Gailileo IDE foundation) was in fact not a Delphi version, but C# Builder 1.0. All Delphi versions since then are based on BDS. The script is based on the BDS registry keys I researched and wrote about in Files in your Delphi settings directory; How to relocate the Favourites on your Welcome page.

Since registry access can be very much flow based, the pipeline architecture of PowerShell is a good fit.

So I wrote a PowerShell script (:

Note Thomas Mueller has written a batch file around the same set of registry keys; the thread there also has some insight in the HKLM versus HKCU keys.

I will explain my script step by step, and start with the most important one: Set-StrictMode -Version Latest. Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in CommandLine, Delphi, Delphi 2005, Delphi 2006, Delphi 2007, Delphi 2009, Delphi 2010, Delphi 8, Delphi x64, Delphi XE, Delphi XE2, Delphi XE3, Delphi XE4, Delphi XE5, Development, PowerShell, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

On my research list: Delphi, .RC and .RES files

Posted by jpluimers on 2014/11/12

One of the things with Delphi and version control systems is that you’d rather have as few binary files in version control as possible.

One of the binary files in virtually every Delphi project is the RES file.

By default, it contains version information, and the icon for the project.

The compiler supports RC files, it’s just the IDE that insists on RES.

So on my research list is how to move everything to RC, and limit the IDE dependency on the RES files.

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/992921/how-to-compile-res-file-from-commandline-delphi-7

–jeroen

via: How to store a large text in a Delphi component? – Stack Overflow.

Posted in Delphi, Delphi XE2, Delphi XE3, Delphi XE4, Delphi XE5, Development, Software Development | 6 Comments »

Delphi: removing “unused” units from uses lists cannot be fully automated (via: SO)

Posted by jpluimers on 2014/11/11

One of the things a lot of Delphi users want is to be able to automagically remove unused units from their uses lists and projects.

The short answer is: you can’t.

The long answer starts with: you can’t fore a number of reasons.

Similar reasonings hold for many other development environments. Plain Windows EXEs and DLL dependencies. .NET projects and assembly dependencies, etc.

Initialization/Finalization dependency

The first reason is that each unit (module, assembly, or other dependency) can contain global code to be executed at unit start/load or finish/unload.

So even though you do not reference anything inside that unit, the initialization and finalization sections can be run.

Removing the dependency from your units and project, kills that functionality. And might break all sorts of things.

Load order dependency

Sometimes you have subtle load order dependencies of units. Those should be rare, and if they are there, should be enforced by the affected units themselves. But everyone knows those subtle dependencies are more often a by product not enforced by anything than coincidence.

So if you start removing references, the load order might change, and subtle bugs may occur.

In other words: test, test, test and test your codebase before and after removing unit references from uses lists.

Parsing

If you understands the dependencies of initializtion/finalization or load order, you will get interested to know what units are actually being used.

The ultimate source for this would be the Delphi compiler. Bad luck here: you cannot use it as the IDE and command-line interfaces don’t offer a hook to it to do just this.

So you need alternative parsers that can help out. The answers to How to remove unused units from all source files on Delphi XE2 describe a few and they all have the same drawback: they are not the Delphi compiler, so they are a rough approximation of what the compiler would do.

And even if the approximation would be perfect, they all suffer from the same thing the compiler suffers from: you can only have one set of conditional defines, platforms, etc at the same time.

There is lots of code for which the usage is conditional, but where the uses list does not reflect this.

Fazit

Optimizing uses lists to eliminate unused units seems a simple thing at start, but isn’t.

The best way to keep those optimized is to prune them while developing. So if you remove code, try to remember cutting down the uses lists by hand.

And then test, test, test and test your codebase.

–jeroen

via: ide – How to remove unused units from all source files on Delphi XE2? – Stack Overflow.

Posted in Delphi, Delphi 1, Delphi 2, Delphi 2005, Delphi 2006, Delphi 2007, Delphi 2009, Delphi 2010, Delphi 3, Delphi 4, Delphi 5, Delphi 6, Delphi 7, Delphi 8, Delphi XE, Delphi XE2, Delphi XE3, Delphi XE4, Delphi XE5, Delphi XE6, Delphi XE7, Development, Software Development | 8 Comments »

Windows .RES/Resource editors

Posted by jpluimers on 2014/11/07

While researching the manifest problem I will post about next week, I made a short list of free Windows Resource Editors:

All other resource editors I found were not free, and someof them not maintained for an even longer period than the free ones.

–jeroen

Posted in Delphi, Delphi 2, Delphi 2005, Delphi 2006, Delphi 2007, Delphi 2009, Delphi 2010, Delphi 3, Delphi 4, Delphi 5, Delphi 6, Delphi 7, Delphi XE, Delphi XE2, Delphi XE3, Delphi XE4, Delphi XE5, Delphi XE6, Delphi XE7, Development, Power User, Software Development, Windows, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows Server 2000, Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2003 R2, Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows Vista, Windows XP | 4 Comments »

ITDevCon and EKON session materials on Delphi Unit Testing + Build Automation and Continuous Integration on-line

Posted by jpluimers on 2014/11/06

The last couple of weeks I taught two sessions at both ITDevCon 2014 in Milano, Italy and EKON 2014 in Köln, Germany.

The EKON materials are slightly more up to date and elaborate (sessions there were 75 minutes), so below are all the links.

Notes:

  • I’ve switched to Markdown for presenting as that is very version control friendly
  • GitHub very good at handling relative links from your Markdown files to other resources, that I’ve switched the Conference repository to GitHub from BitBucket.
  • Somewhere over the next few months, the BeSharp.net repository will convert from Mercurial to Git and also move to GitHub.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Delphi, Delphi 2007, Delphi 2009, Delphi 2010, Delphi x64, Delphi XE, Delphi XE2, Delphi XE3, Delphi XE4, Delphi XE5, Delphi XE6, Delphi XE7, Development, Software Development | 1 Comment »

Delphi and Batch Files

Posted by jpluimers on 2014/11/06

Two interesting links today about Delphi and Batch files.

–jeroen

PS: If you want to see some serious Batch file and PowerShell related scripts, then read through the Build Automation part of my session materials I posted to ITDevCon and EKON session materials on Delphi Unit Testing + Build Automation and Continuous Integration on-line.

More details are in the batch files here:

and PowerShell scripts here:

Posted in Batch-Files, Delphi, Delphi 2005, Delphi 2006, Delphi 2007, Delphi 2009, Delphi 2010, Delphi 7, Delphi XE, Delphi XE2, Delphi XE3, Delphi XE4, Delphi XE5, Delphi XE6, Delphi XE7, Development, QC, Scripting, Software Development | 7 Comments »