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Yes, there is a version 2009. I know Delphi has a big community since years (10 plus)and I believe you could create native windows exe before Visual Basic got to speed (with all its dll's nighmare). But is it future-proof ? Is there a need or market for a non-crossplatform native all-in-one executable ? Will Embarcardero ex Codegear ex Borland continue to push it ? Why is it so expensive ? Who (non company) can afford it, in order to learn it ?

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19 Answers

vote up 15 vote down

We are in a Renaissance of Delphi. I've talked to 3rd party component vendors and they said they are actually getting significant new customers in additions to their existing customers. Delphi 2007 and 2009 are significantly better releases, and I am confident that the next two new versions (which add 64-bit) will continue improving stability and quality.

The lack of Delphi jobs and developers is a myth. There just isn't an over abundance of them. I was laid off a few years ago and had a new Delphi job the next day, and a year I later moved to another Delphi job that paid better. Currently I am responsible for hiring Delphi developers at my company. I have resumes for perfectly good Delphi developers with experience looking for work. Some of the better ones get jobs elsewhere before we can hire them. Sure there are more jobs for C# and Java and there are more candidates for those languages too, but just because there is more of those doesn't mean there isn't any for Delphi.

CodeGear is probably the largest player focusing on native code development. There are other groups out there, but I imagine CodeGear has the most developers. With their coming move to 64-bit and multi-platform (currently in R&D, but probably after 2011 if I were to guess) they will continue to remain relevant. As long as there is native code development, there will be a Delphi and C++ builder for native code. If there is a shift to complete .NET development (unlikely, but would be more then 10 years from now) then we will see Delphi Prism moving along in that area.

The kicker of course is the fact that the majority of software development done is for inhouse IT development, and .NET has a leg up there. That was previously Delphi's strong suite, but it is slowly moving into dominating the Micro ISV arena. The price could stand to come down for that arena though.

Delphi will stick around for a long time. It is under good management now and it is making a lot of improvements, but if they stopped making Delphi tomorrow (which won't happen) then the fact people still use Delphi 5 for production applications today is evidence that all the developers will be able to continue using Delphi for native Windows development for many years to come.

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>"With their coming move to 64-bit and multi-platform". Wait, are you saying they actually ARE working on NATIVE multi-platform? – Mick May 2 at 1:24
According to an online calculator I referenced, the $49.99 turbo pascal in 1983 works out at $106 today and you got a printed manual. Download of Delphi costs 9 times that today. Not that it isn't worth it, but it's a serious barrier to adoption especially for a mISV. Incidentally RealBasic costs $99 for the personal edition of a RAD tool that compiles to native code. – kjack May 2 at 23:05
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There will always be a need for native code. As for "non-crossplatform", they're working on that right now. Delphi's decline in recent years was due to mis-management; Borland did their level best to run it into the ground. Borland's out of the picture now, and they've got some good, competent people at the helm again, so we can expect to see Delphi making a comeback.

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Borland is out of many pictures... Maybe when the BORL price is low enough, Embarcadero could buy them out for the name. – Osama ALASSIRY May 22 at 21:37
Too late. Someone did just recently buy Borland out, IIRC for a stock price of under $1/share. – Mason Wheeler May 22 at 23:39
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Here are some of the advantages and disadvantages of Delphi

Advantages

  • Code is small and fast
  • It is very easy to program
  • Embarcardero – are doing a good job of managing the product
  • It does a good job of abstracting the away all the messy details of windows programming

Disadvantages

  • There are very few Delphi jobs in the market place (from a developers perspective)
  • It is very difficult to find Delphi developers (from an employees perspective)
  • Its help system is very bad
  • There are a small number of third party components – compared to other products like VS
  • People just out of school are not interested in learning it
  • There are hardly any new technical books on it – compared to other products like VS or Java
  • It is not 100% stable
  • Delphi price is insane

In summary

I have been using Delphi for many years and it is a fantastic product.

But if it is not marketed correctly it will continue to lose market share.

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Upped because of "people just out of school are not interested in learning it". As a senior in college, its clear to me that academia has largely passed on from Delphi (and pascal). This usually has its implications down the road. – Paperino Apr 30 at 16:08
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I dunno. Academia tends to be pretty badly out of touch with the real world when it comes to programming languages... – Mason Wheeler Apr 30 at 20:34
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Delphi used to have fantasic help. It also used to have many good components, used to have a top tier IDE (it's what gave the VS team the kick in the butt to improve), and a lot of other things. I used to be a very big supporter of Delphi as it was basically Visual C++ done much better. But Delphi really lost its stride after Delphi 7, and even with the recent turn around is still far behind, trying to graft on up to date features without Anders guidance. In a situation where I need runs on anything native Windows code, I still use Delphi 7, but for everything else C#/VS 2008 is too far ahead. – David May 1 at 13:52
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@David: Gotta love that word, "improve". Microsoft's definition of it seems to be "find someone else who actually does it right and blatantly rip off what they're doing." It's how they created Windows, and they got even more gutsy with C#; they actually brain-drained the architect of the worthwhile program! – Mason Wheeler May 2 at 12:13
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I agree with everything you said except : "It is not 100% stable" Could you clarify that? "Delphi price is insane" I find the price to be fait. It's just that Delphi is Codegears's (Embaradedo's) core business. To Microsoft developer tools are just another product which they give away virtually free to leverage their platform. – Mihaela May 24 at 20:29
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vote up 9 vote down

To answer your question:

Yes.

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2 votes just for saying yes!, (it must be the way he tells 'em) – kjack Apr 30 at 23:40
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3 votes just for saying "2 votes just for saying yes!"?! – stevenvh May 1 at 17:54
I only read the title of this question and YOUR answer specifically :) And I am glad to hear it. – MasterPeter May 14 at 16:08
@kjack, check out nick's profile. His Yes has a higher weighting ;) – MasterPeter May 14 at 16:09
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Here are some of my thughts why Delphi will be here in the future:

  1. Marco Cantu said that The Disney Corporation is extensively using Delphi for managing their amusement parks.
  2. Most of Europe's ATM's are run with a help of Delphi.
  3. Being acquired by Embarcadero is the best thing ever since they are a complementary developer tools company (database tools)
  4. Oracle buying SUN makes the MySQL's future blurry, and puts into perspective Firebird, as the best truly open source enterprise-ready database.
  5. Most third party components for NET developers are closed-source and much more expensive the the Delphi counterparts.
  6. Delphi community is quite fanatical and used to giving away examples, source code and their own time (Jim McKeith with Delphi Podcast, CodeGearGuru, Zarko Gajic from delphi.about.com, Marco Cantu and Bob Swart and their books and others)
  7. Delphi is the best tool for non-managed windows native application for the Micro ISV as well as the Enterprise.
  8. To me, Pascal is much cleaner language then C/C++ and it's derivate languages.
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Imagine if CodeGear once again attempted cross-compilation and made it possible to write Delphi for native Linux and OS X applications. I'm talking Kylix done right.

Holy crap, if I could write 64-bit applications for Linux and OS X, I'd be dropping the dollars, and so would my company.

I think that it would really renew interest in Delphi. Put out a $99 hobbyist edition for the kids to write Linux apps with and it would win some hearts and minds back from VS.

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Cross compilation, yes, but I would rather see as targets rather than completely new IDE's. In a virtual machine world it no longer matters what the IDE requires for a host. OS X is becoming a larger requirement... forcing decisions which are hard to keep Delphi in the mix. – skamradt Apr 30 at 16:16
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For the record, Lazarus and Free Pascal do everything you mentioned and more, except for free. – Kevin Apr 30 at 16:23
Yes, but I hate the Lazarus IDE. And it just doesn't feel right to me. Give me Delphi, or give me death! (my apologies to Patrick Henry) – Mick Apr 30 at 16:44
I agree with Mick, didn't like Lazarus IDE... I got some AVs (IN DESIGN TIME) simply kidding with properties - getting an ide which is more unstable than D2006 is no advantage. – Fabricio Araujo Apr 30 at 18:57
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Agreed. Lazarus would be wonderful if it actually worked. But it doesn't, and it's had the same problems for years, and they're not getting fixed. To be honest, my money's on CodeGear getting cross-platform compilation working long before the Lazarus team fixes their usability and compatibility issues. – Mason Wheeler Apr 30 at 20:37
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The fun is: this question has been asked since Delphi 1 was released.

Other development environments have come and gone, but Delphi is still around.

That should say something, shouldn't it?

(I won't get into any specifics here on which products came and went, as I want to prevent product bashing).

With regards to your pricing question: man power is much more expensive than product pricing, so in the end, buying any development environment is just a small portion of your investment.

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Actually, these questions have been around since the Turbo Pascal days. Back then other shops needed three times the staff to do the same thing we did in Pascal... wait... thats still the case. :) – skamradt May 22 at 23:53
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"But is it future-proof?" - It's future-proof in the sense that Win32 exes will continue to run on Windows forever (either directly or through emulation). I've worked in the Atlanta area as a Delphi contractor for the past eleven years, and I've seen all of my employers either mothball their Delphi projects or convert them to C#/Java. That leads me to believe that the number of copies of Delphi sold compared to 1998 levels is decreasing year by year. At a certain point, the slice of the pie for Embarcadero will be too small to justify continuing the product.

However, if I were a single-person mISV with an idea for a product, and I needed to get that product on the market tomorrow, I would choose Delphi. Unfortunately, as a contractor, I need available jobs, and the pool has shrunk. There are still jobs, but instead of phone calls every week, they're coming every month, and they're coming out of state. So there are still areas where Delphi is perfect, but those areas are shrinking.

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vote up 4 vote down

We have just started to port our codebase to Delphi 2009, after porting it to Delphi 2007 and then from Delphi 7, all in 2 years. Delphi 2009 is SO much better than 2007, and with a new owner (who actually appear to give a hoot about the product), I am really hopeful that the next couple of years will be great for Delphi. With a codebase of over 1 million lines of code, there is no way we can actually port this all to another language (C# being a different mindset, and Java, well being Java!).

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If the question mean whether Delphi will be among major platform for Enterprise application as it was 10 years ago, then I believe there is very little hope.

However, lightweight native application still have it place, since the computing platform try hard to get smaller and smaller everyday.

If CodeGear realize this fact, then there is absolutely good future for Delphi.

Delphi price is insane, everybody agree on that part.

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Whatever happened to the $49 TurboPascal pricing?? – marc_s Apr 30 at 11:40
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Delphi is the perfect solution for W32 virus programmers. Forcing victims to first download the latest dotnet framework sort of slows things down you know. – Wouter van Nifterick May 1 at 1:31
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What everybody seems to miss (including Embarcadero, though they might just be very secretive about this) is that there's a huge amount of people that still sticks to Delphi 7. I don't know the exact number, and I won't tell you the story here about why that is, but it's important for the future of Delphi that these people slowly get persuaded by a new version of Delphi.

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Delphi 7 IDE is considered very stable by most D7 developers. – Majin Magu Apr 30 at 15:53
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I am still using Delphi 7 at my job, but we have moved most of our applications from that to C#. I love Delphi, but it's time has passed. – Jeff Cuscutis Apr 30 at 18:52
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Still using it here when I need to fall back to native code (anything not C#). The fact that its rock solid and fast are a major reason. The help system also works properly thank you very much. For work we have legacy code ported up to Delphi 2007, but its a pain in the butt to use that slow, buggy IDE. – David May 1 at 13:55
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At Delphi Developer Days in Chicago, it was about 50/50 Delphi 7 versus newer versions, a lot of people had newer versions but were slowly porting. However, there weren't many people there under 50 years old. We've got the same problem in the Catholic Church that we've got in the Delphi Community, age and agnosticism. – Peter Turner May 1 at 14:57
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Embarcadero knows it. Delphi 2010 brings back the component palette used in Delphi 1 through Delphi 7, as an option, to entice Delphi 7 developers to finally upgrade. – Jan Goyvaerts Aug 17 at 13:31
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(prophecy On)

The Delphi community will shrink and shrink 'till Embarcadero makes it open-source. And then it will rise from its ashes. Most of the old Delphi gurus will work for OSD (Open-Source Delphi) in their retirement as a hobby. And there will be also lots of young hippie geeks in OSD. David I will be the greatest grandfather in his retirement. Barry and Allen will do great things in OSD too. Nick will finally have enough time to go to the gym.

(prophecy Off)

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And then Anders will want to come back and we'll say "Oi! Anders No!!!", on yer bike my son, no way we're having you after what you done – kjack May 2 at 9:07
I doubt this will happen. These guys all have high paid jobs now. And we are talking manyears here, not 5 minute bugfix hack. Provided that they have compiler experience in the first place. A compiler is a different thing then piling some components in Jedi JVCL. – Marco van de Voort May 2 at 15:40
Maybe, but at least they probably have delphi spirit... And there is an example that proves this is possible. The old guru Jim starkley kept working on firebird with support of SAS after borland make interbase open source. – AhmetC May 2 at 16:14
@AhmetC: I'd say that the whole Jim Starkey / Vulcan affair proves the opposite of your point. SAS people have already said on the dev list they will drop Vulcan for the next major Firebird version, and while Firebird will adopt some things from the Vulcan codebase the port probably wasn't a real success. I'd say the differences between the people with a distant history on such a project and those who did all of the work in recent times can not really be reconciled - who is going to change their ways? Who is getting to make the decisions? – mghie May 2 at 21:41
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Just about the price: To learn the language you could use TurboDelphi, there's a free version.

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I don't think it's too expensive, especially considering what you actually get is a lot more than what you get with Visual Studio.

One thing I learned at the Delphi Developer Days which really opened my eyes to the worthlessness of managed code was the fact that Windows and MS Office don't use .net. Well, if they don't use .net, to program their own stuff then why should you?

That's not like saying, there's no Java code in office, because Open Office has lots of Java. I think if more people get the word out about good software build with Delphi questions about the future of Delphi would disappear. Just the fact that Skype is written in Delphi should prove that much.

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In theory shouldn't witing in a .net language make your product more portable than witing to a language that's tied to one operating system. Unless of course Delphi does what Realbasic does and compiles to several platforms – kjack May 2 at 9:00
They're actually working on that right now. – Mason Wheeler May 2 at 13:03
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Nobody knows. There is no way to predict the future. If Delphi 2010 has all sorts of whiz-bang features, utility and stability you could see a massive reincarnation of Delphi. Or you could see it die of consumer neglect. I remember how quickly Visual Cafe went from number one IDE in the world to quietly being shelved by Borland when they got it by purchasing an enterprise company. I also remember how quickly Visual Basic reversed the prior irrelevance of Microsoft in the dev tools market. Anything can happen.

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I was listening to a Dot net rocks episode on Delphi.Net a while ago (I used to be a Delphi programmer and really miss the compiler). It seems that there will be two Delphi's in the future, a .Net version and a native one. the .Net version is using a new compiler (rewritten for .net) and seems to have new language constructs that current .net languages don't have, for example support for concurrent execution of the stuff in a loop. I think they are back on track, because without the new stuff, I would be asking myself, why should I leave C# for Delphi...

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Close. The compiler wasn't "rewritten for .net", though. The Delphi Prism compiler is actually licensed from RemObjects, who used to sell it as Oxygene (previously Chrome). – Ken White Apr 30 at 13:25
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Until .NET is essentially on all computers, there will always be a market for small, easy to install utilities.

That said, Delphi does have its problems but they are mostly non technical at this point.

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"Until .NET is essentially on all computers" - next release of windows should sort that. – Toby Allen May 25 at 21:24
It'll be a long time before the next release of Windows is on all computers. People are still buying new computers with XP. – Jan Goyvaerts Aug 17 at 13:36
Mono sould take care of any macs and whateverixes – Stijn Sanders Aug 17 at 20:47
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Yes! If Delphi ever dies (one hopes it never will) then something else will have to take its place.

There's development and there's development, some of which is like comparing apples with oranges. Microsoft would like the world to do build solutions the MS way using .NET, and there is a large market for this... Yet there will always been a need to produce solutions against Microsoft's grain.

There will always be a need for real coders to develop native code. MS is going a great job of teaching the masses that they don't need to know how a system works in order to write software for it... but don't loose sight of the ever-present need to be able to fill the gap between where MS would like developers to be and the system being controlled. That was the folly of Vista being build on .NET, and a tough lesson for MS... which is why Win7 is back on native code.

.NET will not save you.

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Was Vista built on .net? Is Windows 7 built on something else? – Peter Turner May 1 at 14:55
As far as I know, Windows 7 is just a cleaned-up version of Vista. I haven't heard anything about them rewriting the codebase. – Mason Wheeler May 2 at 13:05
There was a project to implement the successor of Windows XP in managed code, but it was canned when it got completely out of control, and then development was reset to produce that what is now Vista - in native code. See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Development_of_Windows_Vista/…, especially the point where it says that "of note was the conversion of Windows Explorer to being a .NET application." – mghie May 2 at 21:48
The Windows 7 Engineering Blog has some great insight into the turn-around blogs.msdn.com/e7 – Gerard May 3 at 23:40
I believe MS has the ".Net OS" in the cooker here: research.microsoft.com/en-us/groups/… – Stijn Sanders Aug 17 at 20:49
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Microsoft can use their position as chief operating system producer to always stay ahead in the compiler/ide market. The only way Delphi will survive is: if it is dramatically cheaper, or cross platform or Microsoft upset everyone. My hope for it is that Google buy it and release it at a low price. Programming is programming, if you can program Delphi you can easily learn any modern language/ide. Unfortunately employers are thick and think it is like learning a spoken language like Swiss. Spoken languages have over 100,000 words. Programming languages have less than 100. Maybe we should call it a programming accent or style instead of a language.

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There's a lot more to a language than just the vocabulary, though. In addition to a handful of programming "accents," I speak a second (human) language fluently, and learning the words was the easy part. You can get that part in school, and it's worthless in real-world conversation scenarios. Vocabulary doesn't teach you to actually speak the language. That's about learning the grammar and syntax, which words go well with other words and in what order, recognizing and learning to use common patterns, all sorts of stuff. Similar principles apply to programming languages. – Mason Wheeler May 22 at 23:50

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