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I am responsible for porting a Delphi 2007 application to C# and have absolutely no experience with Delphi. I am wondering what is the difference between the two Indy versions Delphi includes - Indy 9 and Indy 10. At this point I don't even know what an Indy is. Can someone help me out? Are they just different versions of the Delphi Library? What are the implications of using one or the other?

Thanks!

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This is sort of off-topic, but your company is making two huge mistakes. First, re-inventing working software is a very bad idea. ( joelonsoftware.com/articles/fog0000000069.html/… ) Second, if they absolutely must do it, they need someone who understands both Delphi and C# or the finished product is practically guaranteed to be a mess. – Mason Wheeler Apr 20 at 16:09
Well, I'm with you that someone familiar with both languages should be doing the conversion, but to your other point I disagree (for our specific problem) Yes the program works, but it needs updating from time to time, and our shop is moving away from Delphi altogether. There are less and less developers here who know Delphi, so to me it makes sense. – JimDaniel Apr 20 at 17:16
There is a .Net version of Indy 10. Your porting job might be a lot easier than you expect. – Rob Kennedy Apr 20 at 18:57
Well, that's another big mistake. Have you talked to other people who have ported stuff from Delphi to C#? The story usually goes like this: Since most of the Delphi people don't know C#, they can't help much with the porting, so you lose your domain-specific knowledge and experience. The new team has never worked on this before, so they make a bunch of mistakes that the Delphi team learned not to make the first time they did it. – Mason Wheeler Apr 20 at 19:22
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Jim Daniel (replying to your first comment): even then restarting clean in C# is IMHO usually better than conversion. If you really want to move away, do it wholeheartedly. – Marco van de Voort May 31 at 10:11
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5 Answers

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Indy is short for Internet Direct, an open-source library for doing networking. It's most commonly used for doing internet-related things, like sending emails and whatnot.

If you're porting from a legacy (say, Delphi 7) application that uses Indy 8 or 9, you'll find using Indy 9 in Delphi 2007 will be an easier port. If you don't care, use Indy 10, as it's got many significant improvements to the library, and there are also some big architectural changes.

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Indy Delphi is a library(Tcomponent) for Delphi representing the true power of WinSock.It provides components for tunelling,TCP/UDP connections and much more.

The official page is: http://www.indyproject.org You will find everything you need there.

Indy 9 is an old version of Indy library. Indy 10 came out in 2008 along with Delphi 2009.The whole structure of the library is changed in Indy 10.

In my opinion,Indy 9 was better.

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was it ? ... hmm, .... gg – ulrichb Apr 20 at 17:55
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Look at the Indy 10 documentation, specifically the sections What's new in Indy.Sockets version 10 and Changes to the Object Hierarchy

http://www.indyproject.org/docsite/html

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Indy is a winsock wrapper that provides blocking socket behavior for network / internet programming (ftp, telnet, http, etc.)

Indy 10 is a newer version from Indy 9, and while the changes may improve the architecture, they removed some features and move things around. If your program makes use of the parts that were moved or removed then porting to Indy 10 will be painful.

If you are moving from Delphi to C# then you will find the C# version of Indy is VERY different then the Delphi version. Well at least when I looked at it.

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Some details:

  • Indy10 is afaik already in D2005, though versions D2005 and D2006 allow to select which one to install.
  • .... which doesn't matter, in any case always install the latest and greatest to get the newest fixes.
  • Indy10 is better internally, but because they split it in several modules, beginners often have problems manually compiling it. Roughly the way of working of the Indy devels is trust on the users, something that I think was unnecessary in retrospect since all packages must be updated as a whole in practice.
  • Indy10 is portable. The indy9 Kylix support was not much more than an hack.
  • Both work with FPC/Lazarus, but Indy9 only on win32. Indy10 also on Unix, OS X, win64 and wince. On lazarus, the Indy10 port is generally better.
  • Last time I did significant work with it, the Indy10 examples were inferior to the indy9 ones.
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