Book Image

Fearless Cross-Platform Development with Delphi

By : David Cornelius
Book Image

Fearless Cross-Platform Development with Delphi

By: David Cornelius

Overview of this book

Delphi is a strongly typed, event-driven programming language with a rich ecosystem of frameworks and support tools. It comes with an extensive set of web and database libraries for rapid application development on desktop, mobile, and internet-enabled devices. This book will help you keep up with the latest IDE features and provide a sound foundation of project management and recent language enhancements to take your productivity to the next level. You’ll discover how simple it is to support popular mobile device features such as sensors, cameras, and GPS. The book will help you feel comfortable working with FireMonkey and styles and incorporating 3D user interfaces in new ways. As you advance, you’ll be able to build cross-platform solutions that not only look native but also take advantage of a wide array of device capabilities. You’ll also learn how to use embedded databases, such as SQLite and InterBase ToGo, synchronizing them with your own custom backend servers or modules using the powerful RAD Server engine. The book concludes by sharing tips for testing and deploying your end-to-end application suite for a smooth user experience. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to deliver modern enterprise applications using Delphi confidently.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
1
Section 1: Programming Power
5
Section 2: Cross-Platform Power
11
Section 3: Mobile Power
15
Section 4: Server Power

Questions

  1. What FireMonkey project template most closely resembles a new VCL project?
  2. List two ways a FireMonkey checkbox differs from a VCL checkbox.
  3. What can you use in FireMonkey to mimic the VCL's data-aware capability?
  4. What GUI framework is available on Linux that is similar to FireMonkey?
  5. Where can you find PAServer installers for other platforms?
  6. What does a provisioning profile for iOS consist of?
  7. Besides the SDK, what must be in place for testing and debugging Android apps?
  8. How does a FireMonkey application know which view to use when it runs?
  9. What compiler identifier would you use to compile code only on 64-bit platforms?