vote up 4 vote down star

Why EAccessViolation is raised?

uses
  Generics.Collections;
  ...

var
  list: TList<TNotifyEvent>;
  ...

begin
  list := TList<TNotifyEvent>.Create();
  try
    list.Add(myNotifyEvent);
    list.Remove(myNotifyEvent);  // EAccessViolation at address...
  finally
    FreeAndNil(list);
  end;
end;

procedure myNotifyEvent(Sender: TObject);
begin
  OutputDebugString('event');  // nebo cokoliv jineho
end;
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3 Answers

vote up 1 vote down

Is it possible to pass a custom comparer to TList<T>? I don't have D2009 in front of me, so can't try it.

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Yes you can pass one at the overloaded constructor. – Gamecat Nov 14 '08 at 12:35
vote up 3 vote down

It looks like a bug.

If you compile with debug dcu's (normally don't do that unless you want to loose your sanity!) you see that a call to the comparer went wrong. A (possibly optional) third value of a compare function is not set and causes the access violation.

So possibly you can't put method pointers in a generic list.

Ok the following works:

uses
  Generics.Defaults;

type
  TForm4 = class(TForm)
    ...
  private
    procedure myNotifyEvent(Sender: TObject);
  end;

TComparer<T> = class (TInterfacedObject, IComparer<T>)
public
  function Compare(const Left, Right: T): Integer;
end;

implementation

uses
  Generics.Collections;

var
  list: TList<TNotifyEvent>;
begin
  list := TList<TNotifyEvent>.Create(TComparer<TNotifyEvent>.Create);
  try
    list.Add(myNotifyEvent);
    list.Remove(myNotifyEvent);
  finally
    FreeAndNil(list);
  end;
end;

procedure TForm4.myNotifyEvent(Sender: TObject);
begin
  ShowMessage('event');
end;

{ TComparer<T> }

function TComparer<T>.Compare(const Left, Right: T): Integer;
begin
  Result := 0;
end;

You have to define your own comparer, with possiby some more intelligence ;-).

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Looks like a bug to me too. – Fabio Gomes Nov 14 '08 at 12:04
vote up 0 vote down

the above code is used in TForm1 ...

uses 
  Generics.Collections;

procedure TForm1.Button1Click(Sender: TObject);
var
  list: TList<TNotifyEvent>;
begin
  list := TList<TNotifyEvent>.Create();
  try
    list.Add(myNotifyEvent);
    list.Remove(myNotifyEvent);  // EAccessViolation at address...
  finally
    FreeAndNil(list);
  end;
end;
procedure TForm1.myNotifyEvent(Sender: TObject);
begin
  OutputDebugString('event');  // nebo cokoliv jineho
end;
link|flag
Hmm, this isn't really an answer to your question. I think you should merge this with the code in your question (which, as it is now, is invalid because the myNotifyEvent as shown in the question does not match the TNotifyEvent signature (it's not a method there). – Oliver Giesen Nov 14 '08 at 12:40

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