Book Image

Delphi Programming Projects

By : William Duarte
Book Image

Delphi Programming Projects

By: William Duarte

Overview of this book

Delphi is a cross-platform programming language and software development kit that supports rapid application development for Microsoft Windows, Apple Mac OS X, Android, and iOS. With the help of seven practical projects, this book will guide you through the best practices, Delphi Run-Time Library (RTL) resources, and design patterns. Whether you use the Visual Component Library (VCL) or FireMonkey (FMX) framework, these design patterns will be implemented in the same way in Delphi, using Object Pascal. In the first few chapters, you will explore advanced features that will help you build rich applications using the same code base for both mobile and desktop projects. In addition to this, you’ll learn how to implement microservice architecture in Delphi. As you get familiar with the various aspects of Delphi, you will no longer need to maintain source code for similar projects, program business rules on screens, or fill your forms with data access components. By the end of this book, you will have gained an understanding of the principles of clean code and become proficient in building robust and scalable applications in Delphi.
Table of Contents (9 chapters)

Presentation and final testing

Our multi-database system is ready. We have the layers developed for SQL Server and PostgreSQL, and each database is activated according to an option in an INI-type configuration file.

Before we perform the implementation on the main form, we need to remove the self-creation mode data modules in the project settings, so that the application will control the form creation events. This is also important so that we do not have multiple unnecessary instances of our forms and/or data modules.

Data presentation

We need to ensure that all the work developed throughout this chapter can ultimately be consumed in the presentation layer of the system (form). The cherry on the cake is that you just declare...