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Delphi 2009 is due in the next couple months, which is its 12th release since Turbo Pascal became Delphi in 1995. Despite continued innovation it has not returned to its level of popularity before the Inprise fiasco.

Many developers with Delphi backgrounds are moving to C# and many Delphi legacy applications are being rewritten in C#, despite the fact Delphi supports .NET and in many cases the existing application could be ported without rewriting.

Is it just a losing battle to compete against Microsoft's tools on their platform? Is there something Code Gear / Delphi can do now that they are under new management to regain market share? What can enthusiasts do to help?

Why do you do Delphi programming? or Why are you not doing Delphi programming?

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Was Delphi ever on top? – Omar Kooheji Oct 30 '08 at 23:08
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Yes it was. Especially in Delphi 1 - 3 time frame, it was well recognized as the number one development tool. Today it is still well respected in a number of areas, just not in its heyday. – Jim McKeeth Nov 3 '08 at 19:28

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I think Delphi simply needs a plan. I mean: Borland - Inprise - Borland - We're going to sell! - No, sorry, we're not going to sell, it's CodeGear now - Ok, we ARE selling, it's Embracadero now. That did not really help building confidence...

Then, they seem to do too much with too little manpower, and the result are Products like Delphi 8. Oh yes, they were people who actually built stuff with it, but that does not change the fact that it was really bad, sorry guys. The new IDE (I think it was called Galileo) took until Delphi 2006 to actually be usable, but at that point they already lost a lot of reputation due to two less than stellar versions (D8 and D2005).

Then, they did leave out Win32 too long. Unicode VCL? Bah, just use the shiny new .net! Now, if their .net implementation would not be soo far behind Microsoft that would may be work, but with a Win32 Delphi that starts to age and a .net Delphi that is 2 years behind Visual Studio, I did not really have the opinion that the guys had a clue what they want to do.

I do not want to sound too harsh though, the Delphi Guys were quite open and available in the newsgroups, and they did not really try to hide the fact that it was Borland Management who is to blame here, but as a customer that does not matter to me.

So basically, a period of bad, old and overpriced products really cost them.

I think they are now moving strong again. They seem to be under the hood of a company who actually cares now, they are start making more interesting Products again (to my knowledge, Delphi 2007 has a good Vista Support, working AJAX and FINALLY Unicode, even though I did not try and use them). Blackfish SQL looks really interesting as well.

I think they still need a bit more polish, a clearer road map, re-think the pricing. Compared to the Visual Studio Professional Pricetag of 899 €, Delphi is not really competitevily priced, and the full Developer Studio is even less so.

The Delphi Language is still quite attractive in my opinion, so I would be sad to see them go down, but in the last years, Delphi reminded me of the Amiga, with all the positive and negative thoughts associated with that.

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What is needed to get Delphi back in the mainstream?

The hand of God?

I think Delphi was pretty nifty originally (as was their C++ equivalent). At this point though, I'm not sure what Delphi offers over comparable products except a smaller developer base. If you want to build for .NET, it seems that C# is the obvious choice. If you want to build native, you're probably going to go for C/C++

So what niche exactly does Delphi fill, other than the we've-already-got-this-code-written niche? And yes, that's an important niche, but it won't do much to get Delphi into the mainstream. It just relegates Delphi to legacy code. I don't think Borland wants Delphi to be the new Cobol.

For the record, I do wish that Borland was more competitive with Microsoft. It worries me that development tools for Windows are almost exclusively produced by Microsoft.

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What's gone wrong with Delphi is a case of mismanagement. They shouldn't have released Kylix and they cannot compete with MS on the .NET front. Delphi 2005 was a disaster of a product and the damage had been done in previous with 8 and 2005 being the most notable.

They are moving in the right direction with releasing the turbo range for free but I think the best things they can do is target schools and universities and get people switched on sooner rather than later. Perhaps they could open some of their source?

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Seems that if they could cater to a missing feature in the Microsoft toolkit, they could gain some market share (Such as making UI's unit testable).

I originally used Delphi because VB wasn't ready for prime time outside of IT apps, and C++ MFC was a real PITA to develop UIs with.

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And Then a Miracle Occurs

I think that is the key to a recovery. I really don't see anything else doing it at this point.

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Bribery? End times? Hurricanes?

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As a Delphi developer, I'd say focus on Win32 development. Borland/Inprise/Borland - Codegear/Embarcadero really lost their focus when they decided to do Delphi for .NET. It was and is guaranteed to lag behind MSFT's offerings in that area.

Now that Microsoft is focused on .NET and web development, there is an opening for truly great Win32 environments. Even though that's quickly becoming a niche market, it's one they could dominate.

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For one they can release and maintain a viable *nix version of their development suite.

Another, they can make it less bulky. The amount of disk space required for .NET and Visual Studio is ridiculous, and Code Gear has certainly followed suit with their enterprise-y crap.

Make it less enterprise-y. Small, fast and capable compilers and IDEs.

That would get me to switch/stay. Lazarus and Free Pascal just aren't there (for me) yet.

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NOT .net or JVM support. Delphi was great as it was a faster way to build GUI apps that could be statically linked into one executable (more or less). I would like to see it go back to that. It had an awesome "rad" environment too (man that term has gone out of vogue).

I think it should play to its (historical) strengths. There aren't many tools on windows where you can build an executable and ship it and it will just work anymore... delphi was one of the greats.

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There has been such a lack of focus (Kylix !) and stability in the Borland / Inprise / Borland / CodeGear / Embarcadero mess over the years that large companies were never going to invest in that technology suite, because who knew where it was going to be in six months time ? Even now, with the new owner in place, who knows where it's going to end up ?

I started using Delphi when D3 was the current version, and have since used 5, 7, 2005 and 2006. In that time, I evangelised somewhat to the VB developers that I was in fairly close contact with, when it really was an excellent alternative to VB (up to VB6 I guess). But corporates bought into MS technology then and they do now.

If Embarcadero are going to change Delphi's fortunes then there needs to be continued support of free versions (the Turbo range), somehow getting Delphi into the hearts and minds of new developers (get 'em while they're young !) and fix a problem that MS isn't fixing.

Oh, and Jim, I am using Delphi, because I love it ! And as of today, reading your blog too ;^)

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Delphi needs a technical overhaul as well as what others have alluded to, long-term plans and stability.

That an service pack upgrade to Delphi is followed by nothing less than an 18-point plan on how to manage the upgrade means that somewhere, somehow, a lot of people just didn't do their job.

Even Microsoft, who just released SP1 for Visual Studio 2008 covering many different editions in one service pack manages with a normal installation wizard that just does the job. Period.

This kind of problem is symptomatic to how Delphi has been created and managed over too long a time.

Delphi needs to be fixed:

  • stability issues
  • make the actual compiler and the intellisense processor behave the same way, or even just combine them, we have been forced to just ask the editor to forego any kind of advanced intellisense because it just plainly gets it wrong, every time. Things like red squigglies hovering in whitespace between methods and similar doesn't build confidence.
  • make the entire eco-system more stable, the way component packages are loaded and built just means that the day just one of these files have a problem, Delphi simply gives up, entirely
  • and then there's the entire long-term planning department, which seems to have taken a permanent hiatus. Stop bundling new products along with Delphi and start making the product itself better, then perhaps people would start taking it seriously enough to warrant long-term commitments to using it.

I believe the illustration shown above, with the miracle, describes the current state of affair exactly.

Delphi is a sinking ship, and nothing less than a miracle will save it. Good intentions and well-meaning is not enough.

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Delphi's component system. Hear hear! It's a nightmare when someone new has to install Delphi, or re-install their machine. – Ian Boyd Oct 3 '08 at 13:35
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Effectively coding in Delphi is not easy since we're not taught it in school. To me, that's the biggest problem, no one is going to switch to Delphi and for the most part all us junior programmers are scared to go to a place where Delphi is the major programming language because about 2.5 percent of development houses use it and it seems to be useless experience.

However, Delphi is awesome, if you read the manual it gets all the more awesome. So if Delphi were taught as a benign non-controversial teaching language like it's predecessor Turbo Pascal was (I'm not sure if there no controversy here), it would be used way more than Java is.


Any info on 2009 would be appreciated, we're planning on updating from Delphi 7 to 2007 (and it may well be 2009 by the time we do).

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The original architect of Delphi moved to Microsoft and created C#. So to answer your question, I guess he'd have to quit and go back to CodeGear.

When a product no longer has the founding team, it's very difficult to ever get the "magic" back. Corel acquired Ulead and now my favorite graphical editing software is slowly turning into crap.

Borland as we knew it is gone, and I've switched to C#. The size of the community alone makes all the difference in my daily work. Just look at the number of Delphi questions in here, for example. EEK!

Funny though, Delphi still rules Win32 in a world where Microsoft WPF makes people nervous. I still use Delphi 7 at work for our Windows client apps.

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What does WPF stand for? – Toby Allen Sep 26 '08 at 9:53
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I've heard of this great search engine that might answer that question for you on the first linked result. – jsight Sep 26 '08 at 16:51
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Windows Presentation Foundation – Ian Boyd Oct 3 '08 at 13:36
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I learned Delphi for a job I held recently (for a short period). I honestly think that Win32 Delphi is the best natively compiled (ie, not Python, Java, or .NET/Mono) language in existence. If you compare a feature list of C# and Delphi (pioneered by the same intelligent being) you will be amazed at what Delphi does while still compiling to native code. The Algol/Pascal/Delphi syntax did not become popular, but I honestly think that it is a shame because it is very well structured. I'd much rather use Delphi than C++ for writing native apps. That said, I am a Linuxer, and these days I use Python, but if Free Pascal were a standard part of Linux distros, I would happily use it for non-trivial applications.

To answer the question: Linux support (not Kylix, that was a mistake) and less of an emphasis on .NET development or up-to-date .NET/Mono support would help. Unfortunately, I don't think anything will rescue Delphi at this time.

It's too bad. Delphi code compiles insanely fast compared to C++. It is a statically typed language with the option of having dynamic types (Variant) like Boo, and possibly C# 4.0. Really, this language was so far ahead of its time. People are excited now about getting dynamic typing in their non-dynamic languages, but Delphi had it going on well over a decade ago. Interfaces, abstract classes/methods, properties, etc. I could go on, but you get the point.

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I loved Delphi years ago. When what seemed to be the most "mainstream" choices were C++, VB, or Delphi (not that it was really ever mainstream), Delphi was the cat's meow.

However, I do not miss Delphi for a second. At all. There was something about it that never seemed quite right. Weirdness with windowing on Windows (hehe) and seemed to wreak of an ocean of badly-designed apps.

As much as I loved Delphi back in the day, I couldn't care less what happens to it now that I have my beloved C#.

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Delphi needs compelling advantage over the existing ways to build apps on Windows. Since the .Net runtime is commonly found on client PC's, Delphi's advantage of being native feels less significant. At this point, Delphi provides a way to build Windows applications in a less-friendly and arguably less-productive manner than VB.Net, C#, IronPython, etc. It seems cornered into the niche of maintaining legacy applications.

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It's too late for Delphi, which is sad as I love working in it.

  1. Kylix was a disaster. No one will pay for Linux developer tools.
  2. The .net versions are redundant and only usable for transition to Microsoft's .net tools. Company name changes and being for sale with no buyer give a feeling of instability.
  3. Every place I have worked that used Delphi has completed or is in the process of moving to .net.
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Delphi was always the choice by developers in the know and clearly a superior development tool than Visual Studio in so many ways.

Then came .Net and the situation became much less clear. Borland put a lot of effort into making Delphi a .Net player, but by producing a product that was always going to be one or two steps behind Visual Studio .Net it was doomed. Visual Studio .Net was always the best choice for .Net development. Borland should have just produced a Delphi plug-in for Visual Studio instead of leaving it to RemObjects.

But now that CodeGear is in charge and free from the shackles of Borland, things seem a lot better. CodeGear has listened to customers who have always said that they want more work done on the native development side of Delphi.

This is were Delphi clearly scores, MicroSoft has now left Delphi as the primary tool for native Win32 (and hopefully soon Win64) development. For simple applications Delphi is a winner. This is why I am still using Delphi.

As an example we are having great success in deploying Delphi applications using thin client computers running XP embedded. These systems use flash drives rather than hard drives and are fanless and hence very quiet. The flash drives we use are 512 Mb so there is plenty of space to install a Delphi application on top of the small footprint of XP embedded.

I think Delphi will be around for many years to come.

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Borland lost us with Delphi 6. Our million+ line application, which has successfully been transitioned from 2 to 3 to 4 to 5, would not longer compile on D6, without drastic code rewrites. Someone thought it would be a good idea to break DesignIntf, but it cost Borland in the end. Too bad, since Delphi is still to me the best way to build a Win32 application, but we are currently slowly moving from Delphi5 to VC++. In my opinion, nothing will bring back Delphi.

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I am assuming you were linking DesignIntf in your production code, which was actually a violation of the license. DesignIntf is for design time interfaces - components and expert/wizard/add-ins. – Jim McKeeth Sep 16 '08 at 23:15
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You might as well wish for the return of PowerBuilder, Gupta SQL Windows, and, while we're at it, Lotus 123. Delphi, while it was great during its peak, is forever lost to its better managed, better marketed, and more widely known competitors. RIP Delphi.

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Loved the old Borland when they were doing Turbo / Borland Pascal. The compiler was tight for the days. The executable was small, compact, and it ran fast vs something from other vendors that produced bloated executables. Barrier to entry of using their product at the time was pretty low, price-wise, which was a good way to attract new / existing developers. Borland nowadays is just a pale shade of what they used to be. Go back to the old days and maybe they can success in the IDE / SDLC tools / Language market again.

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Delphi was a good language design for early 1990s.

Over time, it added more features to try to stay current. By 2002 or so it had some Byzantine and messy parts. I know this because I built a parser for Delphi source. I had to do it by trial and error, since there is no complete formal definition of the language grammar. People still come with corner cases that Delphi compiles but my parser doesn't.

Delphi's value proposition was that it has all the advantages of C++ as a Win32 programming environment, without the extra complexity. That's if you regarded Multiple Inheritance, templates etc as needless complexity, which quite few people did. But Java and .Net fill that niche, and other niches, and also does away with the memory management complexity that Delphi had, and allows Generics as a simpler form of templates. And runtime metadata, and some platform portability, etc.

C# was a good language design for early 2000s.

It too is adding stuff, but seems to be handing growth a bit better, so it may last longer than Delphi. However, it is inevitable that it too will be superseded sooner or later.

Delphi's remaining niche is for maintaining existing Delphi code, and possibly for Win32 applications that for some reason can't be .Net applications. Delphi.net never had much of a niche - if you're going to write for .net, why not learn C#, or if you know VB, use that?

What is needed is for you to get over your nostalgia. Delphi has had its day.

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What is needed is:

1) Attitude - for companies to start adopting development tools by technical preference of their developers rather than following the political hype. We have stuck firmly with Delphi for 12 years, in spite of occasional doubtful looks from customers. This has resulted in significant performance and maturity in our codebase. Had we switched to the fashionable language du jour every 2 years, we would be nowhere near this level today. So yes, Delphi is "legacy" but also (for us) an indispensable basis for future advances.

2) Evangelism - show the youngsters today how Delphi completely outperforms the "big guys" in runtime performance, productivity, and community support. Keep the pricing competitive and make sure students do their first programming courses with Turbo Delphi.

3) CodeGear should go in and embrace the efforts of the FPC team to gain access to native 64-bit Windows, Linux and MacOS cross-compilation support.

4) Take the lead in support for Multicore processing (compiler level optimizations, framework library support, debugger improvements, design tools, etc).

5) More effort to be put into quality assurance tools specifically for Delphi - code analysis, coverage tracking (branch and line based), timing profiler, unit and UI testing, etc.

regards, Kristofer

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What would not hurt Delphi is frankly a free version with sqlite database. I started using delphi when Delphi 1 was in beta and totally loved it. I stopped using Delphi for totally unrelated issues when Delphi was in version 5. I might be going back soon. But a free version doesn't hurt.

What about a Mac version ?

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There are places where I find Delphi to be a better tool than C#/VB.NET. For writing Win32 services, Delphi works better for me. The footprint of the .NET Framework is huge and for many cases, just overkill for a service application. I have written a few services with Delphi and it's a really good tool for that sort of work.

Delphi 2009 finally adds unicode to the VCL, that should make it more attractive to the world market. I was glad to see that the 2009 version is Win32 only, I really had no use for a non Micrsoft .NET IDE. I think Delphi will have it's place, but it's just going to be a tiny sliver of the market place.

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I also think that they should forget about the .NET version, and focus on Win32.

A Linux compiler would be a great feature. I don't think a Linux IDE is necessary, just the compiler.

And I second targetting universities and schools. My first programming class was with Turbo Pascal, so adopting Delphi later was a natural path. Today kids are beggining with Java.

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Focusing on Win32 seems an unlikely path to lead to mainstream adoptance. – BobbyShaftoe Dec 16 '08 at 11:55
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Let's see what the Embarcadero era will bring. It is no secret that the Inprise/Borland period was a period of missing focus when it came to the Delphi/C++Builder tools.

Having used Turbo Pascal and Delphi since their conception, I still haven't managed to find other tools that equally rich in function, performance and ease of use. It is even harder to find a language that surpass Delphi code in readability and maintainability.

Yes - there are areas where Java, Python, Ruby, C# or even C++ work better, but if you are doing native Windows applications - there simply is no better tool available. It is also a glittering tool for writing data servers.

With Delphi 2009 and Generics, Unicode and other assorted tidbits - Delphi has enough vitality to hold it's own against the steady flow of "new and shiny". With the next versions heading for parallelism and 64-bit - the future looks solid.

Some tool designs just keep working and cuts through your work.
Delphi is nostalgic in the same way as a knife is nostalgic.

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I still use Delphi and intend to do so. The biggest benefits I find are:

  1. Quick and easy deployment ( no need for .NET and GAC )
  2. Easy to debug - No .NET stack overflows that are increasingly difficult to debug
  3. Better documentation (and working examples) than MSDN
  4. Several thousand working and tested components

I should point out my clients do not care for the latest fad., they just want something that works reliably and keeps up-to-date with their business. Delphi is still the fastest way to created reliable executables that I know about.

What Delphi needs is not more features but better marketing of their product. Focus on needs of large corporations rather than fads like RoR/BlackFish/.NET you can only sell a fad for a short amount of time.

Latino - for Linux look at FreePascal and PowUtils

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Codegear just need to be a bit quicker on their feet.

Clearly Microsoft have as good as abandoned customers developing native code, this creates a good opportunity for an alternative. However we have only just got support for Unicode and there still isn't any 64 bit support.

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I've been an enthusiastic Delphi 6 user. I've switched to C#/C++ because my job requires me to use those tow.

I've been playing with D2009 for two days now and I think it's fantastic. However, I'll probably not buy, the steep pricetag beiing the main reason. So what would bring me back?

  • lower pricetag
  • native Linux support
  • native Win64 support

I'm not that fond of .NET as everybody else seems to be. Native is the way to go.

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