Typically an event handler will be declared with a property declared like this:
property OnMyEvent: TMyEvent read FOnMyEvent write FOnMyEvent;
So, in order to fire it the code will execute FOnMyEvent
and so you need to search the component's source code for references to FOnMyEvent
or possibly OnMyEvent
. Usually you will find something like this:
procedure TMyComponent.DoMyEvent;
begin
if Assigned(FOnMyEvent) then
FOnMyEvent(Self);
end;
Finally, you need to look for the places where DoMyEvent
is called.
As a worked example, we can use the OnSetText
event of TField
. This is declared like this:
property OnSetText: TFieldSetTextEvent read FOnSetText write FOnSetText;
That's the only reference to OnSetText
. So we look for FOnSetText
which leads to this:
procedure TField.SetEditText(const Value: string);
begin
if Assigned(FOnSetText) then FOnSetText(Self, Value) else SetText(Value);
end;
Now, SetEditText
is a private method, so we don't need to look outside the unit in which it is declared. And the only place it is used is as the property setter for TField.Text
:
property Text: string read GetEditText write SetEditText;
Then you could continue and look for the places where that property is assigned to, but there will be a lot of places where that happens. So, if you want to debug all this you simply need to enable Debug DCUs and set a breakpoint inside TField.SetEditText
. You may wish to make the break point condition on the content of Value
if your find that the break point fires too often.