19

I got code like this

name := 'Foo';
If name = 'Foo' then
  result := TFoo.Create
else if name = 'Bar' then 
  result := TBar.Create
else if name = 'FooFoo' then
  result := TFooFoo.Create;

Is there a way just to do

result := $name.create

or some way of creating class based of a variable value?

All the classes extended the same base class.

4
  • Thanks Mat, you beat me to the formating
    – Wizzard
    Apr 24, 2011 at 19:40
  • which version of Delphi are you using?
    – Johan
    Apr 24, 2011 at 22:07
  • 1
    Duplicate: Is there a way to instantiate a class by its name in delphi? No close vote since that question is before Delphi had enhanced RTTI. Apr 25, 2011 at 0:18
  • The OP seems confused. The code sample shows "creating an instance of a class, by name" but the question title says "create class from a string" which is a different and probably not useful thing.
    – Warren P
    Apr 25, 2011 at 2:24

3 Answers 3

29

Starting with Delphi 2010, the enhanced RTTI allows you do this without having to creating your own Class Registry.

Using the RTTI Unit you have several options available.

For Parameter Less Constructors one of the easiest is.

var
 C : TRttiContext;
 O : TObject;
begin
  O := (C.FindType('UnitName.TClassName') as TRttiInstanceType).MetaClassType.Create;
  ...
 end;

Here is an example of passing a parameter, using the TRttiMethod.Invoke()

var
 C : TRttiContext;
 T : TRttiInstanceType;
 V : TValue;

begin
  T := (C.FindType('StdCtrls.TButton') as TRttiInstanceType);
  V := T.GetMethod('Create').Invoke(T.metaClassType,[self]);
  (V.AsObject as TWinControl).Parent := self;
end;

I wrote several articles on the RTTI unit as there is many options available.


Updated Based on David Request:

Comparing the usage of construction using the Class Type (Virtual Constructor) with the TRttiType.Invoke

Class Type Method: (Virtual Constructor)

  • Works in all version of Delphi
  • Produces Faster Code
  • Requires knowledge of ancestry at compile time.
  • Requires a Class Registry to look up a Class by a String Name (Such as mentioned by RRUZ)

TRttiType.Invoke() method

  • Only works in Delphi 2010 or later.
  • Slower code
  • Implements a Class Registry that takes Name conflicts into account
  • Requires NO knowledge of ancestry at compile time.

I personally find each serves a different purpose. If I know all the types up front the I use the Class Type Method.

9
  • 2
    Mind, however, that you are much better off looking for a constructor called Create, because Robert's code will simply call TObject.Create's constructor, which, if TClassName's constructor does anything at all, is the wrong thing to do. The instance won't be initialized properly. Apr 24, 2011 at 20:28
  • 1
    why is this better than the old fashioned method using virtual constructors? Apr 25, 2011 at 8:24
  • 1
    @David: If you know all the details of your classes up front then there is no benefit. The RTTI, offers the benefit of being able to determine at runtime what parameters are required and allowing you to pass them. It also works well with class structures that can't descend from a common root type. Apr 25, 2011 at 12:59
  • @Robert In this case the OP is taking about a class that descends from a common root. I think you ought to at least point out in your answer that calling Invoke for the OP's use case is not the best solution. Apr 25, 2011 at 13:23
  • @David: Just to be complete, I compared both methods in depth. Apr 25, 2011 at 14:19
16

You can use the GetClass function, but before you must register the classes using the RegisterClass or RegisterClasses methods.

GetClass(const AClassName: string): TPersistentClass;
9
  • How does this create a class??
    – Johan
    Apr 24, 2011 at 22:05
  • 10
    It gives you the class so you can call call create. GetClass('Name').Create; Apr 24, 2011 at 22:15
  • 4
    @Johan, I don't understand your comment and downvote, do you read the documentation about the GetClassfunction?
    – RRUZ
    Apr 24, 2011 at 22:17
  • Briefly, I downvoted because it does not answer how to create a class. It only enters part of the question. With a little bit more text i'm sure you can answer the full question. Also I think it is not nice to have to register the classes. And finally you said nothing about static vs virtual constructors. Oh and what about constructors with and without parameters?
    – Johan
    Apr 24, 2011 at 22:20
  • 8
    @Johan: you can't create a class at runtime... if you like to be picky, you can create class instances, not classes. Also whatever technique you would like to use to get a class reference to create an instance you need some sort of mapping between class referneces and whatever identifier you'd like to use to retrieve them. Unless needing to work in a very generic way, IMHO RTTI is the best way to make code undreadable (and slow). But RTTI too "registers" names to the corresponding metadata and code. Anyway, instead of complaining about other's answers, offer your own...
    – user160694
    Apr 24, 2011 at 23:11
12

The normal way to do this is with virtual constructors. A good example is TComponent which you are no doubt familiar.

TComponent has the following constructor:

constructor Create(AOwner: TComponent); virtual;

The other key to this is TComponentClass which is declared as class of TComponent.

When the VCL streams .dfm files it reads the name of the class from the .dfm file and, by some process that we don't need to cover here, converts that name into a variable, ComponentClass say of type TComponentClass. It can then instantiate the object with:

Component := ComponentClass.Create(Owner);

This is the big advantage of having a virtual constructor and I would encourage you to take the same approach.

If you have to use a string to identify the class then you'll still need to come up with a lookup routine to convert from the string class name to a class reference. You could, if convenient, hook into the same VCL mechanism that TComponent uses, namely RegisterClass.

Alternatively if you could replace name in your code with a class reference then you could write:

type
  TFoo = class
    constructor Create; virtual;
  end;
  TBar = class(TFoo);

  TFooClass = class of TFoo;

var
  MyClass: TFooClass;

...

MyClass := TFoo;
result := MyClass.Create;//creates a TFoo;

MyClass := TBar;
result := MyClass.Create;//creates a TBar;
5
  • +1 This is my preferred method even though you have to code your own lookup (a simple TStringList with the class references in the Objects is usually more than adequate) because it avoids the bloating of the RTTI and the requirement of specific class as the root of your own class hierarchy. Apr 25, 2011 at 7:45
  • @marjan you can use one of the system registeries but doing so introduces concerns over namespaces. The most important thing is to know about virtual constructors which is quite a nuance and one which neither of the other answers mention. Apr 25, 2011 at 7:52
  • 1
    yes, virtual constructors are indeed the crux when using class references. Virtual constructors are so "natural" to me that I forget that not all languages have them and/or that not all programmers are familiar with them. Thanks for drawing my attention to that. It will help in my coaching role at work. Apr 25, 2011 at 8:22
  • I had used it in an application to reduce circular references from main form to new forms (since I like to do MDI GUIs). I only had main form to reference an auxiliar form unit in uses clause when it really needed such. Made it so much smaller and clear.... ;-) Apr 25, 2011 at 17:52
  • +1 Nice clean answer. Suggest that the type of result is demonstrated in the example. For example, if TFoo had a base class of (say) TForm as in TFoo = class(TForm), declare as result: TForm;.
    – AlainD
    Apr 12, 2020 at 10:37

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