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Mastering Delphi Programming: A Complete Reference Guide

You're reading from   Mastering Delphi Programming: A Complete Reference Guide Learn all about building fast, scalable, and high performing applications with Delphi

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Product type Course
Published in Nov 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838989118
Length 674 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Primož Gabrijelčič Primož Gabrijelčič
Author Profile Icon Primož Gabrijelčič
Primož Gabrijelčič
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Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. About Performance 2. Fixing the Algorithm FREE CHAPTER 3. Fine-Tuning the Code 4. Memory Management 5. Getting Started with the Parallel World 6. Working with Parallel Tools 7. Exploring Parallel Practices 8. Using External Libraries 9. Introduction to Patterns 10. Singleton, Dependency Injection, Lazy Initialization, and Object Pool 11. Factory Method, Abstract Factory, Prototype, and Builder 12. Composite, Flyweight, Marker Interface, and Bridge 13. Adapter, Proxy, Decorator, and Facade 14. Nullable Value, Template Method, Command, and State 15. Iterator, Visitor, Observer, and Memento 16. Locking Patterns 17. Thread pool, Messaging, Future and Pipeline 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Dynamic record allocation

While it is very simple to dynamically create new objects—you just call the Create constructor—dynamic allocation of records and other data types (arrays, strings ...) is a bit more complicated.

In the previous section, we saw that the preferred way of allocating such variables is with the New method. The InitializeFinalize demo shows how this is done in practice.

The code will dynamically allocate a variable of type TRecord. To do that, we need a pointer variable, pointing to TRecord. The cleanest way to do that is to declare a new type PRecord = ^TRecord:

type
TRecord = record
s1, s2, s3, s4: string;
end;
PRecord = ^TRecord;

Now, we can just declare a variable of type PRecord and call New on that variable. After that, we can use the rec variable as if it was a normal record and not a pointer. Technically, we would have to always...

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