Hi,
Interfaces can have aliases for functions:
Function MyOtherFunction : Integer;
Function IMyInterface.MyFunc = MyOtherFunction;
Can normal object have aliases for properties? For example,
TControl.Caption. I would like to publish this property in my descendant as
"MyExtraText". Is thi
On Fri, 7 Dec 2012, Krzysztof wrote:
Hi,
Interfaces can have aliases for functions:
Function MyOtherFunction : Integer;
Function IMyInterface.MyFunc = MyOtherFunction;
Can normal object have aliases for properties? For example,
TControl.Caption. I would like to publish this property i
On 07/12/12 2:50, Krzysztof wrote:
Hi,
Interfaces can have aliases for functions:
Function MyOtherFunction : Integer;
Function IMyInterface.MyFunc = MyOtherFunction;
Can normal object have aliases for properties? For example,
TControl.Caption. I would like to publish this property in
Thanks
2012/12/7 Howard Page-Clark
> On 07/12/12 2:50, Krzysztof wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> Interfaces can have aliases for functions:
>>
>> Function MyOtherFunction : Integer;
>> Function IMyInterface.MyFunc = MyOtherFunction;
>>
>> Can normal object have aliases for properties? For examp
Hi,
I have a relatively simple JSON object consisting of some integer and string
fields and a large (500-50 entries) float array.
Following the parsedemo.pp I extract the values from JSON and put them in my
pascal class. All works as expected only that I do not seem to find a method to
copy
When using something like InitialisePostgres3(), if the approximate
location of the database library (.so or .dll) is known, what's the most
effective way of finding the exact file? Is there a single routine that
does a recursive search?
The reason that I ask is that it appears that the most e