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Delphi 2011 is on the horizon, which is the 14th 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 Delphi can do now that they are under new management with Embarcadero 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 don't think it was ever "the number one development tool" - if you really want to pick a number one it was Visual Basic (depite its limitations)... however it was certainly as good a development tools as existed for Windows (better than VB certainly) and in the top tier when it came to options. – Murph Dec 27 '09 at 12:47
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@Murph It really depends on how you look at #1. It was certainly faster growing and more powerful than VB, and gave Microsoft a good run for their money. It was a big part of the reason Microsoft hired so many people away from Borland, including Anders Hejlsberg, who later created C#. – Jim McKeeth May 2 '10 at 1:28
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Murph, user279521, Warren P, I assume you're talking about U.S. of A? In Europe Delphi was way more popular than Microsoft's offerings. MS C++ was too complicated and VB was too simplistic. Delphi was right in the middle. Also, in terms of native API support in Delphi vs. C++, Murph looks like you don't know what you're talking about. – zvolkov Jun 15 '10 at 23:26
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This question is not a good fit to our Q&A format. We expect answers to generally involve facts, references, or specific expertise; this question will likely solicit opinion, debate, arguments, polling, or extended discussion. See the FAQ.

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81 Answers

a few answers here mention advertising.

to embarcadero : why not consider a delphi sponsored tag in "StakOverflow" ?

alt text

Of course it's not the most important thing needed for Delphi,
but little things can sum up to something Big...

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Delphi needs us - me and you (and them). Having been to some Delphi presentations, it is great to see the product in the hands of people that actually seem to care about it, and who look like they have hitched their wagon to Delphi and have actually developed the product in the right direction. The next release (2011 maybe?) should push things again in the right direction.

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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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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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In our case? An inexpensive, low-end version of Delphi, with prices prominently displayed on the website.

We use InnoSetup, an open source installer package written in Delphi, and we'd really like to add some new features to it, and send our patches to the author.

Back when Delphi was Inprise, it cost something like $800. Today, the website doesn't show any prices. This usually suggests that either (1) Delphi is embarrassingly expensive, or (2) a salesperson wants to talk to me on the phone and figure out how much money I've got. Then, when I say no, the salesperson will call me back every 3 months.

Microsoft has quite a few inexpensive, low-end options for C# and C++. If Delphi is going to survive as anything but a niche product for legacy enterprise code, it will need to do the same.

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Maybe they should rehire Anders Hejlsberg.

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Delphi needs a couple of things:

  1. Price and confidence
    These two go together. You simply cannot charge so high price for something without solid future track.(Borland-Inprise-Borland-selling-not selling-CodeGear-selling-Embarcadero). No software house is going to spend so much money on the risky product!

  2. Innovative product
    Programmers need to develop application in less time. They need to have reason to upgrade to the new Delphi version. => Buy DeveXpress and offer all their VCL stuff in new Delphi. Come up with some Delphi framework... simply do something what give us a strong argument over .NET Visual Studio.

  3. Community
    Borland simply did not appreciate the community enough. The best way about Delphi was to use components by someone else. I didn't need to develop my own components. I either bought or simply took the code of someone else. If I needed help... I used google and I got the answer... It's changing now. All these developers are going to C# and their post are desperately old. :(

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Support for more operating systems and architectures. Support open-source communities financially. Increase media exposure.

And educate the people that Pascal is powerful.

Also, there really should be more articles on Wikipedia about Pascal, Object Pascal, and Delphi, and Embarcadero.

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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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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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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 think the new managmenet with Embarcadero is a big plus. There is still a market for non MS tools and I think we will see Delphi gain ground. While it has a popular following outside of the US, it definitly needs to gain steam on the US side. IMO Delphi needs to:

  1. Continue to publish their roadmaps and stick to them
  2. Quality releases
  3. Bypass .Net and stay native
  4. 64 bit processing
  5. Take advantage of Embarcadero tools and integrate them into a future IDE.
  6. Tighter web development integration. Maybe VCL for Google apps.

Delphi has a large base and the first two items should allow them to focus on preventign the base from migrating to .Net (it is insane in my opinion to move a large Delphi system to .Net from a cost perspective). As a long time user I see a very positive future with the Embaracero purchase.

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People, Please..... You can upgrade from really old versions of Delphi (5) and the upgrade price for the pro version is less than 400.

Delphi is not dead, it's still better than C# and winforms for desktop applications and developing database apps is about 100 times easier and more intuitive.
If your using C# instead you are missing out BIG TIME. C# users are like lemmings.......

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Even if that's true, there's a lot more code in your codebase that will compile than there is that won't. Tossing it all out and starting over in C# or some other language is a huge mistake. Just roll up your sleeves and get it fixed. – Mason Wheeler Jan 20 '09 at 2:44
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Another thing that would change Delphi's status, is if universities went back to teach Pascal. If the next current crop of fresh programmers would be weaned on Pascal, end enjoy that language, its syntax, and its idiosyncrasies, Delphi would become a more natural choice. I dont know of any major (or not major) university that has been teaching pascal as the main language in years... in fact, havent seen it taught formally since I was in high school. Everyone is teaching more C-type-syntax languages now (C/C++/C#/Java/Perl/etc).

Maybe if Delphi would stop being supported altogether, Pascal would be considered a historical language and could be taught instead of LISP ;-)

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Free version.

i've used Delphi 5 for the last 10 years, but now we're switching to Visual Studio C#.

Delphi is a clean language. The compiler is much faster than VS, and is more stable. Its class library source is open. It has had an active and helpful forum community.

But recent versions of Embargadero Borland Codegear Developer Studio are very Visual Stuido-esque. It's slower, bigger, bulkier. The open and thriving community forums are now closed.

And if i'm going to use a Visual Studio clone, why not just use the original? Especially when the original is free?

Perhaps we would come back if Borland stopped spitting on it's customers.

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Delphi Needs great help (D2009 getting better) and lots of supplied demos. Although there are lots of stuff on the 'net nice readable code should be available for download from Codegear and which compiles and works. Take the PIC micro as an example. It sells in millions due to lots of simple examples of how to use it.

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What I don't understand is why Delphi is always singled out, like it is here, and why C++ Builder hardly gets the same attention. Truth be known that both Delphi and C++ Builder use the same underlying VCL. And the IDE for Delphi is the same as that of C++ Builder with the property editors, controls, and drag-n-drop components.

My company uses C++ Builder almost exclusively. We even developed our own visual layout tool for our accounting system so that we can build or change screens on-the-fly. We do this by reading in and streaming the VCL DFM files and connecting the resulting GUI to an embedded Perl interpreter.

I can't say enough good things about the VCL. My only wish is for a Linux port such that I can just recompile for Linux. Kylix was a disaster....

my 2 cents ;)

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A VB6 to Delphi converter and allow Delphi to support VB6 third party controls.

From my limited experience, VB6 is a lot more similar to Delphi than it is to .net. So, if folks can create a VB6 to VB.net converter then perhaps someone can create a VB6 to Delphi converter. Not an easy task. But an easy sell if it works. And that's the kinda of technology you want to work on, right? A technological challenge with high marketability.

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Unicode VCL, Generics, new Datasnap enhancements etc. was right things although much late. I believe if they can have progress like 2007->2009 for two more Delphi versions, they can be on track again. They lost many years around D8-D2006 but I appreciate their progress with D2007 and especially D2009 and I know there are still need for native apps so I think, Delphi might not be mainstream (it never was, anyway) but can be a strong alternative again, if they will do keep doing right things. IMHO, they just need x64 and more support for multicore and web-enabled ,distributed applications.

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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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Delphi could use a few more tools that are common-place outside the Delphi community :

Both very powerfull tools.

Sure, we've got Code Healer, Pascal Analyzer and AQtime amongst others, but they are not common-place (yet - maybe because they are commercial instead of free software? I don't know.)

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64 Bit Compiler, please

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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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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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cool, Borland lost 14 upgrades of the enterprise edition, for the next how many releases? Did you really know about DesignIntf being mentioned in the license before D6? Seriously... – Tony BenBrahim Sep 27 '08 at 3:27
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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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What I believe Delphi needs most urgently

  • Rock solid IDE.
  • Radically cut prices
  • Native 64bit
  • Good documentation (it amazes me how bad it is in D2006)
  • LINQ alike features and syntax.
  • Competitive multithread solutions.
  • A completely free for all usage lite-version (like VS Express)

All this is needed just to make Delphi on pair with Visual Studio. After that they need to start innovate if they want to reach the top.

Some things that could make Delphi reach the top

  • Some kind of cash refund if the IDE ever crashes.
  • Everything .NET has but native.
  • Some way of directly being able to use manged .NET code from inside native Delphi.
  • Advertising, convincing old custumers that Delphi is back on track.
  • Cross platform support. Not just Linux and Mac. All sort of embedded OS and small microprocessors. Mobile phones, Ipods, toasters, you name it! (skip the VCL if it can't be ported).
  • More luck than mankind has ever seen.

Also, I think moving Delphi.NET to Visual Studio would be a good idea.

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I think it's telling that (as far as I can see ) no CodeGear employee answered on this question up untill now;

To me this is a clear sign that they have full confidence in their product!

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Moving back in the direction of cross-platform support.

Back when I was a Delphi programmer, our desktop app had been written in Delphi mainly because at the time (the mid 90s) it was the only decent win32 RAD tool on the market. As things moved on, they stayed with Delphi mainly because it wasn't Microsoft under the hood - knowing the libraries and widgets and whatnot didn't come out of Redmond gave us an extra level of confidence that it would actually work.

Also, we were in the rare position of if we could have gotten a Linux version out the door, we probably would have doubled our annual sales. Even though Kylix never actually worked, the promise of of being able to essentially just recompile our win32 GUI app for linux was the best thing we'd ever heard since we didn't have anywhere near the manpower to rewrite the thing.

It was a coincidence that the company went out of business about the same time Kylix was officially canceled and Delphi moved to .net, but it sure felt appropriate.

But seriously - if Delphi rolled in transparent support for Mono (or something) and went back to being three years ahead of Microsoft instead of two behind, I think their market share would come back overnight.

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I still using delphi 6 on some of our products.

i belive .net delphi compiler must be free, maybe core part of .net framework, but free. And anyone with a notepad shoud be able to implement a delphi solution without paying for de ide. and anyone who bougth visual studio shoud be able to develop a delphi solution.

besides love to the language, there aren't any other reasons to develop a delphi application instead of a c# application.

borland folks just destroyed delphi. maybe is just time to let it die

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Delphi Prism already has some sweet language features that hardly anybody knows about, like the colon operator for avoiding nil checks, expressions in property read/write clauses, and the Observer-pattern "notify;" modifier for properties.

Put some of those features into Win32 Delphi. The colon operator would be a fantastic addition to the language. Property read/write expressions, same deal. Add an Observer pattern to the VCL that comes with built-in language support that makes it dead simple to do it right.

Steal some ideas from C# 4, too, like passing named parameters (something I've been missing in Delphi ever since I saw Smalltalk). And for God's sake, give me a "using" block to replace the tired old "try..finally..FreeAndNil".

In other words, pour on the syntactic sugar.

Then hype those features. Blog about them. Put how-to videos about them on the front page of codegear.com. Give conference sessions (and keynotes) that are just about language goodness. Put a low-cost compiler out there, lurk in C# forums, and tell people "Oh, that would be easy with Delphi, maybe you should check it out." Get mindshare. Show people that the language has built-in support for the things they bang their heads against on a daily basis.

Microsoft does a release every two or three years, and they're very cautious about adding new language features. CodeGear could (and should) run circles around them.

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