Book Image

Delphi High Performance - Second Edition

By : Primož Gabrijelčič
5 (1)
Book Image

Delphi High Performance - Second Edition

5 (1)
By: Primož Gabrijelčič

Overview of this book

Performance matters! Users hate to use programs that are not responsive to interactions or run too slow to be useful. While becoming a programmer is simple enough, you require dedication and hard work to achieve an advanced level of programming proficiency where you know how to write fast code. This book begins by helping you explore algorithms and algorithmic complexity and continues by describing tools that can help you find slow parts of your code. Subsequent chapters will provide you with practical ideas about optimizing code by doing less work or doing it in a smarter way. The book also teaches you how to use optimized data structures from the Spring4D library, along with exploring data structures that are not part of the standard Delphi runtime library. The second part of the book talks about parallel programming. You’ll learn about the problems that only occur in multithreaded code and explore various approaches to fixing them effectively. The concluding chapters provide instructions on writing parallel code in different ways – by using basic threading support or focusing on advanced concepts such as tasks and parallel patterns. By the end of this book, you’ll have learned to look at your programs from a totally different perspective and will be equipped to effortlessly make your code faster than it is now.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

FastMM4 internals

To get full speed out of anything, you have to understand how it works, and memory managers are no exception to this rule. To write very fast Delphi applications, you should therefore understand how Delphi’s default memory manager works.

FastMM4 is not just a memory manager—it is three memory managers in one! It contains three significantly different subsystems— a small block allocator, a medium block allocator, and a large block allocator.

The first one, the allocator for small blocks, handles all memory blocks smaller than 2.5 KB. This boundary was determined by observing existing applications. As it turned out, in most Delphi applications, this covers 99% of all memory allocations. This is not surprising, as in most Delphi applications most memory is allocated when an application creates and destroys objects and works with arrays and strings, and those are rarely larger than a few hundred characters.

Next comes the allocator for medium...