I want to pass the formatting arguments Args into the Format function. I found some examples of that, but I can't find out how to assign string constant in the TVarRec member. The following code fails on compilation with E2089 Invalid typecast.

procedure TForm1.Button1Click(Sender: TObject);
var Arguments: array of TVarRec;
begin
  SetLength(Arguments, 2);

  Arguments[0].VInteger := 111;
  Arguments[1].VAnsiString :=  PAnsiString('Text'); // I want to set this member

  ShowMessage(Format('Decimal: %d, String: %s', Arguments));
end;

Can anyone suggest me how to set the string (or AnsiString) constant to the TVarRec member ? I'm using Delphi 2009.

Thanks a lot

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Relevant article for people who have never seen this hairy aspect of Delphi before: rvelthuis.de/articles/articles-openarr.html – Warren P May 19 '11 at 13:12
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I wrote an answer and deleted it, and someone else did too. This one was HARD. Good one TOndrej. – Warren P May 19 '11 at 13:47
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Just for the record: You don't have to do all of that. You can call Format directly (and much more easily): ShowMessage(Format('Decimal: %d, String: %s', [111, 'Text']));. This works anywhere TVarArgs is called for (typically for an array of const) - you can create the VarArgs array by just passing it as [StringItem, IntegerItem, BooleanItem] and so forth. – Ken White May 19 '11 at 22:05
You're right however I was considering to pass the Args as an array of string with variable length as the arguments to the Format function. – user532231 May 19 '11 at 23:29
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You're right, but hard to say if the one notice the comment prior to the accepted answer; however still would be fine to rephrase it to the common way using own function instead of Format – user532231 May 20 '11 at 0:54
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2 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

This seems to work in XE:

var
  Args: array[0..1] of TVarRec;
  S: AnsiString;
  U: UnicodeString;
begin
  S := 'Hello';
  U := 'world';
  Args[0].VType := vtAnsiString;
  Args[0].VAnsiString := Pointer(S);
  Args[1].VType := vtUnicodeString;
  Args[1].VUnicodeString := Pointer(U);

  Writeln(Format('%s, %s!', Args));
end;
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+1 and accept. This works also in Delphi 2009. Thanks a lot :) – user532231 May 19 '11 at 13:18
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Type-casting Pointer(S) should also work (thus allowing for empty strings). Seems the problem is merely with string literals. – Rob Kennedy May 19 '11 at 13:21
Yes, Pointer(S) does work, too. – TOndrej May 19 '11 at 13:27
I've modified the code to show both AnsiString and UnicodeString args. – TOndrej May 19 '11 at 13:32
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Wow. That was harder than I thought it would be! Another previous deleted answer used SetLength on an Array of TVarRec, and that appears to fail at runtime, even though it compiles okay. I was surprised by that. – Warren P May 19 '11 at 13:47
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Just my two cents. TOndrej's answer is correct, but I just wanted to emphasize some points. And comments are not a good place to do it.

Please be aware that the AnsiString must be referenced during all time TVarRec will be used.

For instance, if you write a function setting an array of TVarRec, you should ensure that you made a temporary copy of the AnsiString created within the function to a variable which will remain until all time the TVarRec array is used. Otherwise you may have some random access violation (not every time, but only when the MM reassign the ansistring memory).

For instance, the following code is incorrect:

type
  TVarRec2 = array[0..1] of TVarRec;

procedure SetVarRec(a,b: integer; var Result: TVarRec2);
begin
  Result[0].VType := vtAnsiString;
  Result[0].VString := pointer(AnsiString(IntToStr(a)));
  Result[1].VType := vtUnicodeString;
  Result[1].VString := pointer(UnicodeString(IntToStr(b)));
end;

Because the AnsiString and UnicodeString temporary variables will be freed when the procedure ends, and Results[].VString will still point to those freed memory...

Using a class or a record with some temporary private string may do the trick:

type
  TMyVar2 = record
  private
    tmpA: AnsiString;
    tmpB: UnicodeString; 
  public
    VarRec: TVarRec2;
    procedure SetVarRec(a,b: integer);
  end;

procedure TMyVar2.SetVarRec(a,b: integer);
begin
  VarRec[0].VType := vtAnsiString;
  tmpA := AnsiString(IntToStr(a));
  VarRec[0].VString := pointer(tmpA);
  VarRec[1].VType := vtUnicodeString;
  tmpB := UnicodeString(IntToStr(b));
  VarRec[1].VString := pointer(tmpB);
end;

Of course, in your program you may have an already existing class. In this case, you would better use a method, and some private temporary strings. For the method to be multi-thread safe (i.e. re-entrant) you should provide the temporary strings as parameters...

I use this trick to have valid a dynamic array of TVarData containing some AnsiString content in a class. In fact, TVarData and TVarRec both uses such non referenced pointer to strings, which can be confusing.

Be aware that issues involving pointer(S) like statements can be difficult to track.

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