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 ‘Development’ Category

The intrinsic factory pattern that every Delphi programmer uses

Posted by jpluimers on 2020/01/22

A blast from the past: my 2009 answer to [WayBackWhat Design Patterns do you implement in common Delphi programming? – Stack Overflow which is still very much relevant today.

TL;DR

Every Delphi programmer uses the factory pattern as it is an intrinsic part of how components at design time work.

So he were go:

Only a minority of the Delphi developers knows that every Delphi developer uses a Factory pattern (delphi.about.com has an example in “regular” Delphi), but then implemented using virtual Create constructors.

So: time to shed some light on that :-)

Virtual constructors are to classes like virtual methods are like object instances.

The whole idea of the factory pattern is that you decouple the logic that determines what kind (in this case “class”) of thing (in this case “object instance”) to create from the actual creation.

It works like this using virtual Create constructors:

TComponent has a virtual Create constructor so, which can be overridden by any descending class:

type
  TComponent = class(TPersistent, ...)
    constructor Create(AOwner: TComponent); virtual;
    ...
  end;

For instance the TDirectoryListBox.Create constructor overrides it:

type
  TDirectoryListBox = class(...)
    constructor Create(AOwner: TComponent); override;
    ...
  end;

You can store a class reference (the class analogy to an object instance reference) in a variable of type ‘class type’. For component classes, there is a predefined type TComponentClass in the Classes unit:

type
  TComponentClass = class of TComponent;

When you have a variable (or parameter) of type TComponentClass, you can do polymorphic construction, which is very very similar to the factory pattern:

var
  ClassToCreate: TComponentClass;

...

procedure SomeMethodInSomeUnit;
begin
  ClassToCreate := TButton;
end;

...

procedure AnotherMethodInAnotherUnit;
var
  CreatedComponent: TComponent;
begin
  CreatedComponent := ClassToCreate.Create(Application);
  ...
end;

The Delphi RTL uses this for instance here:

Result := TComponentClass(FindClass(ReadStr)).Create(nil);

and here:

// create another instance of this kind of grid
SubGrid := TCustomDBGrid(TComponentClass(Self.ClassType).Create(Self));

The first use in the Delphi RTL is how the whole creation process works of forms, datamodules, frames and components that are being read from a DFM file.

The form (datamodule/frame/…) classes actually have a (published) list of components that are on the form (datamodule/frame/…). That list includes for each component the instance name and the class reference. When reading the DFM files, the Delphi RTL then:

  1. finds about the components instance name,
  2. uses that name to find the underlying class reference,
  3. then uses the class reference to dynamically create the correct object

A regular Delphi developer usually never sees that happen, but without it, the whole Delphi RAD experience would not exist.

Allen Bauer (the Chief Scientist at Embarcadero), wrote a short blogarticle about this topic as well. There is also a SO question about where virtual constructors are being used.

Let me know if that was enough light on the virtual Create constructor topic :-)

This resulted in this interesting comment by Kenneth Cochran:

Factory pattern implementations in other languages use ordinary static functions (or class functions for pascalites). As such they are capable of returning null(nil). A Delphi constructor, like the nameless constructors in other languages, will always return an object reference unless you raise an exception. You are free, of course, to use a class function just as easily if the need arises.

–jeroen

Posted in Delphi, Development, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

Today’s Organizations Waste Talent. Here’s How To Change That. | Corporate Rebels

Posted by jpluimers on 2020/01/21

[WayBack] Today’s Organizations Waste Talent. Here’s How To Change That. | Corporate Rebels

Our research into more than 100 workplace pioneers reveals an important shift –“from job descriptions to talents and mastery”. It’s a clear differentiator between traditional and pioneering organizations.

Traditional organizations focus on fixed job descriptions, and linear careers that move from one description to the next. Progressive organizations focus on “talents & mastery”– and craft jobs and development opportunities around the specific skills employees would love to exploit.

The article goes on how to get the best from your talent and talents in other people.

via [WayBack] Today’s Organizations Waste Talent. Here’s How To Change That. | Corporate Rebels – Marjan Venema – Google+

–jeroen

Posted in Agile, Development, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

Delphi, compiler intrinsics and generic type matching

Posted by jpluimers on 2020/01/21

For my link archive in case I ever need to do Delphi generic type matching on intrinsic types. This will be tricky as you can have typed types like [WayBacktype TDate = type TDateTime since the early Delphi ages.

[WayBack] Hi, by using compiler intrinsics, is it possible to check if a generic type parameter is an unsigned integer? – Malcon X Portela – Google+

It will probably come down to fast intrinsic type mapping and slower typed type mapping.

The above WayBack link contains the most important bits of the Google+ post:

Hi, by using compiler intrinsics, is it possible to check if a generic type parameter is an unsigned integer? I have the following code:

function TChecker<T>.CheckIsUnsigned: Boolean;
begin
  if GetTypeKind(T) = tkInteger then
  begin
  if SizeOf(T) = 4 then
  begin
    // TODO: Check if it is an unsigned 32-bit integer
    Result := True;
  end else if SizeOf(T) = 2 then
  begin
    // TODO: Check if it is an unsigned 16-bit integer
    Result := True;
  end else
  begin
    // TODO: Check if it is an unsigned 8-bit integer
    Result := True;
  end;
  end else
  begin
    Result := False;
  end;
end;

The code should return True only if the ‘T’ generic type parameter is an unsigned integer. I remember that +Stefan Glienke posted here some code that can do this trick, however, I am not able to find that now.

Thanks!


Hi +Jeroen Wiert Pluimers, my answer can be a bit disappointing, sorry :( Some time after writing this question here, I just realized which for the things I was originally trying to do, being signed or unsigned would not change anything on the final result hehehehe :D But from this amazing project https://github.com/d-mozulyov/Rapid.Generics (entire credits goes to Dmitry Mozulyov for the magic), it is possible to write the check to the generic type parameter in order to identify if it is a 32-bit/64-bit signed or unsigned number.

LTypeData := PTypeInfo(TypeInfo(T)).TypeData;

case GetTypeKind(T) of
  tkInteger:
  begin
    {case LTypeData.OrdType of
      otSLong: Writeln('32-bit signed');
      otULong: Writeln('32-bit unsigned');
    end;}
    // the above code does the same thing
    if LTypeData.MaxValue > LTypeData.MinValue then
    begin
      Writeln('32-bit signed');
    end else
    begin
      Writeln('32-bit unsigned');
    end;
  end;
  tkInt64:
  begin
    if LTypeData.MaxInt64Value > LTypeData.MinInt64Value then
    begin
      Writeln('64-bit signed');
    end else
    begin
      Writeln('64-bit unsigned');
    end;
  end;
end;

The [WayBack] Rapid.Generics project is indeed cool, but unmaintained and has no unit tests. The main code is in some [Wayback] 30k lines Rapid.Generics.pas unit with some cool ideas and implementations. Hopefully people will find time to integrate some of the ideas there into basically the only well maintained Delphi generics library Spring4D.

A big limitation might be that the code is Delphi XE8 and up only, whereas Spring4D supports older Delphi versions.

–jeroen

Posted in Conference Topics, Conferences, Delphi, Development, Event, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

Some things I learned from “Git tips and tricks | GitLab”

Posted by jpluimers on 2020/01/21

Via [WayBackGit tips and tricks | GitLab “Handy Git commands for everyday use” I learned these:

 

–jeroen

Via: [WayBack] GitLab on Twitter: Ready to get #backtowork? Brush up on a few tips and tricks we use at GitLab everyday: https://t.co/W8zFjxnSN6

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Development, DVCS - Distributed Version Control, git, Software Development, Source Code Management | Leave a Comment »

Delphi: A few notes on tracking down a use-after free related issue involving interfaces crashing inside System._IntfClear.

Posted by jpluimers on 2020/01/20

A few notes on tracking down a use-after free related issue involving interfaces.

The crash message is like this:

Project UseAfterFreeWithInterface.exe raised exception class $C0000005 with message 'access violation at 0x004106c0: read of address 0x80808088'.

Two things here:

An important note first

Basically any memory value in an exception starting with $8080 and sometimes even $80 should raise suspicion: it usually means a use-after-free case.

You see these errors with FastMM and not with the memory manager as [WayBack] delphi • View topic • Problem with FastMM and D7 explains:

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Conference Topics, Conferences, Delphi, Development, Event, Software Development | 8 Comments »

Tweaking4All.com – Topics – Delphi – How to change the font of a hint window

Posted by jpluimers on 2020/01/19

[WayBack] Tweaking4All.com – Topics – Delphi – How to change the font of a hint window: Delphi THintWindow are odd, as you cannot set the Vcl.Forms.HintWindowClass before uses it to initialise the hint window in the Application instance from the initialisation section in the Vcl.Forms unit.

The only way to change it is to:

  1. Set the HintWindowClass to a new class
  2. Toggle the state of Application.ShowHint

So the duplicate line below is no accident:

  HintWindowClass := TMyHintWindow;
  Application.ShowHint := not Application.ShowHint;
  Application.ShowHint := not Application.ShowHint;

References:

–jeroen

Posted in Delphi, Development, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

visual studio code – Does the “editorWhitespace.foreground” workbench.colorCustomizations setting in VSCode actually work? – Stack Overflow

Posted by jpluimers on 2020/01/16

[WayBack] visual studio code – Does the “editorWhitespace.foreground” workbench.colorCustomizations setting in VSCode actually work? – Stack Overflow

Yes, it does. But after reading [WayBack] vscode-docs/theme-color-reference.md at master · Microsoft/vscode-docs · GitHub: Editor Colors or [WayBack] Visual Studio Code Theme Color Reference you might want to put it in the config straight like this:

see the editor white spaces, enable Toggle Render Whitespace.

  • editorWhitespace.foreground: Color of whitespace characters in the editor.

However, you need to embed it like this:

"workbench.colorCustomizations": {
    "editorWhitespace.foreground": "#333",
    "editorIndentGuide.background": "#333"
  }

The embedding makes it work.

References:

–jeroen

Posted in .NET, Color (software development), Development, Software Development, Visual Studio and tools, vscode Visual Studio Code | Leave a Comment »

Delphi – BDE to FireDAC: pack table, regenerate index – Stack Overflow

Posted by jpluimers on 2020/01/16

This works with any tool that can access ADO based dBase databases with MDX indices: [WayBackdelphi – BDE to FireDAC: pack table, regenerate index – Stack Overflow.

Related: [WayBack] CREATE INDEX for Paradox | Microsoft Docs

Thank you Thomas for this addition to my link archive!

–jeroen

via: [WayBack] > An old program of ours uses dBase tables and an .MDX index – other systems use these tables too, so we’re stuck with them. We wish to replace BDE with… – Thomas Mueller (dummzeuch) – Google+

 

Posted in Database Development, dBase, Development, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

Mad With PowerShell: FileInfo and DirectoryInfo objects are not populated upon creation in PowerShell

Posted by jpluimers on 2020/01/16

[WayBack] Mad With PowerShell: FileInfo and DirectoryInfo objects are not populated upon creation in PowerShell.

TL;DR:

  • Apart from the FullName property, the other poprerties of FileInfo and DirectoryInfo are populated later than their instance creation
  • A call to their Refresh method populates or re-populates them
  • That method is implicitly called when you request other properties than FullName

Example: see the [Archive.is]fileinfo.cs: Length property

–jeroen

Posted in .NET, C#, CommandLine, Development, F#, PowerShell, Software Development, VB.NET | Leave a Comment »

ρσℓα¢ķ͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌ on Twitter : “The PowerShell console history file isn’t just useful for DFIR peeps, red team-ers should check it too! 4096 entries by default, here’s the path…”

Posted by jpluimers on 2020/01/15

Not sure why, but I checked a few of my systems and no  file at %userprofile%\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\PowerShell\PSReadline\ConsoleHost_history.txt

Heck: no ConsoleHost_history.txt files on those systems anywhere.

[WayBack] ρσℓα¢ķ͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌͌ on Twitter : “The PowerShell console history file isn’t just useful for DFIR peeps, red team-ers should check it too! 4096 entries by default, here’s the path: %userprofile%\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\PowerShell\PSReadline\ConsoleHost_history.txt”

–jeroen

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Posted in CommandLine, Power User, PowerShell, PowerShell | Leave a Comment »