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Fearless Cross-Platform Development with Delphi

You're reading from   Fearless Cross-Platform Development with Delphi Expand your Delphi skills to build a new generation of Windows, web, mobile, and IoT applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800203822
Length 544 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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David Cornelius David Cornelius
Author Profile Icon David Cornelius
David Cornelius
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Toc

Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Programming Power
2. Chapter 1: Recent IDE Enhancements FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Delphi Project Management 4. Chapter 3: A Modern-Day Language 5. Section 2: Cross-Platform Power
6. Chapter 4: Multiple Platforms, One Code Base 7. Chapter 5: Libraries, Packages, and Components 8. Chapter 6: All About LiveBindings 9. Chapter 7: FireMonkey Styles 10. Chapter 8: Exploring the World of 3D 11. Section 3: Mobile Power
12. Chapter 9: Mobile Data Storage 13. Chapter 10: Cameras, the GPS, and More 14. Chapter 11: Extending Delphi with Bluetooth, IoT, and Raspberry Pi 15. Section 4: Server Power
16. Chapter 12: Console-Based Server Apps and Services 17. Chapter 13: Web Modules for IIS and Apache 18. Chapter 14: Using the RAD Server 19. Chapter 15: Deploying an Application Suite 20. Assessments 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Using a Raspberry Pi

Before the 1980s (and even for some time after that), computers were huge, taking up large air-conditioned rooms, and requiring massive amounts of energy and a highly trained staff. Today's hand-held smartphones are far more powerful than those behemoths and require almost no training at all. As the power of computers continues to increase and the size continues to decrease, the physical devices humans use to interact with a computer (such as keyboards and mice) can take more space than the computer itself. The term "fat finger" means more than just making a mistake on the keyboard; it now represents the limiting factor on user interfaces.

The Raspberry Pi is one of the more popular examples of this great reduction of computer size where the actual computer—CPU, memory, and interface ports—is the smallest component of the system, with the keyboard and monitor dwarfing the tiny case housing the electronics. Indeed, there are some...

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