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Expert Delphi

You're reading from   Expert Delphi Robust and fast cross-platform application development

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781805121107
Length 424 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Marco Cantù Marco Cantù
Author Profile Icon Marco Cantù
Marco Cantù
Paweł Głowacki Paweł Głowacki
Author Profile Icon Paweł Głowacki
Paweł Głowacki
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Building Blocks FREE CHAPTER
2. Chapter 1: Fasten Your Seat Belts 3. Chapter 2: Mind Your Language 4. Chapter 3: Packing Up Your Toolbox 5. Chapter 4: Using the Parallel Programming Library 6. Part 2: Going Mobile
7. Chapter 5: Playing with FireMonkey 8. Chapter 6: FireMonkey in 3D 9. Chapter 7: Building User Interfaces with Style 10. Chapter 8: Working with Mobile Operating Systems 11. Chapter 9: Desktop Apps and Mobile Bridges 12. Part 3: From Data to Services
13. Chapter 10: Embedding Databases 14. Chapter 11: Integrating with Web Services 15. Chapter 12: Building Mobile Backends 16. Chapter 13: Easy REST API Publishing with RAD Server 17. Chapter 14: App Deployment 18. Chapter 15: The Road Ahead 19. Index
20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Riding the IDE

In a nutshell, Delphi is a program for making other programs. The program responsible for generating executable files from the source code is a compiler. It is typically implemented as a command-line application, but it can also be invoked directly from the IDE. When executing the compiler as a command-line application, you can pass to it command-line parameters. As depicted in Figure 1.6, compilers take different command-line parameters, including the location of source code files necessary to generate the resulting binary file:

Figure 1.6: A simplified compiler architecture

Figure 1.6: A simplified compiler architecture

It is possible to write your programs using a text editor such as Notepad and then execute the compiler from the command line, but it is not the most efficient way of creating applications. Most programmers use IDEs to work on apps. The idea of an IDE originates from Delphi’s ancestor – Borland Turbo Pascal, in the 1980s – and it comes from the...

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