show/hide this revision's text 3 fixed error in cdecl description

Delphi uses the so called fastcall calling convention by default. This means that the compiler tries to pass parameters to a function in the CPU registers and only uses the stack if there are more parameters than free registers. For example Delphi uses (EAX, EDX, ECX) for the first three parameters to a function.
In your C# code you're actually using the stdcall calling convention, which instructs the compiler to pass parameters via the stack (in reverse order, i.e. last param is pushed first) and to let the callee cleanup the stack.
In contrast, the cdecl calling used by C/C++ compilers forces the callee caller to cleanup the stack.
Just make sure you're using the same calling convention on both sides. Stdcall is mostly used because it can be used nearly everywhere and is supported by every compiler (Win32 APIs also use this convention).
Note that fastcall isn't supported by .NET anyway.

show/hide this revision's text 2 added 84 characters in body

Delphi uses the so called fastcall calling convention by default. This means that the compiler tries to pass parameters to a function in the CPU registers and only uses the stack if there are more parameters than free registers. For example Delphi uses (EAX, EDX, ECX) for the first three parameters to a function.
In your C# code you're actually using the stdcall calling convention, which instructs the compiler to pass parameters via the stack (in reverse order, i.e. last param is pushed first) and to let the callee cleanup the stack.
In contrast, the cdecl calling used by C/C++ compilers forces the callee to cleanup the stack.
Just make sure you're using the same calling convention on both sides. Stdcall is mostly used because it can be used nearly everywhere and is supported by every compiler (Win32 APIs also use this convention)convention).
Note that fastcall isn't supported by .NET anyway.

show/hide this revision's text 1

Delphi uses the so called fastcall calling convention by default. This means that the compiler tries to pass parameters to a function in the CPU registers and only uses the stack if there are more parameters than free registers. For example Delphi uses (EAX, EDX, ECX) for the first three parameters to a function.
In your C# code you're actually using the stdcall calling convention, which instructs the compiler to pass parameters via the stack (in reverse order, i.e. last param is pushed first) and to let the callee cleanup the stack.
In contrast, the cdecl calling used by C/C++ compilers forces the callee to cleanup the stack.
Just make sure you're using the same calling convention on both sides. Stdcall is mostly used because it can be used nearly everywhere and is supported by every compiler (Win32 APIs also use this convention)