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Inmutable string in delphi, are they alwaysAre Delphi strings immutable?

As far as I know, strings are inmutable immutable in Delphi. I kind of understand that means if you do:

string1 := 'Hello';
string1 := string1 + " World";

first string is destroyed and you get a reference to a new string "Hello World".

But what happens if you have the same string in different places arround around your code?

I have a string hash assigned for identifying several variables, so for example a "change" is identified by a hash value of the properties of that change. That way its it's easy for me to check to "changes" for equality.

Now, each hash is computed separately (not all the properties are taken into account so that to separate instances can be equal even if they differ on some values).

The question is, how does Delphi handles those strings? If I compute to separate hashes to the same 10 byte length string, what do I get? Two memory blocks of 10 bytes or two references to the same memory block?

Clarification: A change is composed by some properties read from the database and is generated by an individual thread. The TChange class has a GetHash method that computes a hash based on some of the values (but not all) resulting on a string. Now, other threads receive the Change and have to compare it to previously processed changes so that they don't process the same (logical) change. Hence the hash and, as they have separate instances, two different strings are computed. I'm trying to determine if it'd be a real improvement to change from string to something like a 128 bit hash or it'll be just wasting my time.

Edit: Version of Delphi is Delphi 7.0

show/hide this revision's text 2 Added clarification

As far as I know, strings are inmutable in Delphi. I kind of understand that means if you do:

string1 := 'Hello';
string1 := string1 + " World";

first string is destroyed and you get a reference to a new string "Hello World".

But what happens if you have the same string in different places arround your code?

I have a string hash assigned for identifying several variables, so for example a "change" is identified by a hash value of the properties of that change. That way its easy for me to check to "changes" for equality.

Now, each hash is computed separately (not all the properties are taken into account so that to separate instances can be equal even if they differ on some values).

The question is, how does Delphi handles those strings? If I compute to separate hashes to the same 10 byte length string, what do I get? Two memory blocks of 10 bytes or two references to the same memory block?

Clarification: A change is composed by some properties read from the database and is generated by an individual thread. The TChange class has a GetHash method that computes a hash based on some of the values (but not all) resulting on a string. Now, other threads receive the Change and have to compare it to previously processed changes so that they don't process the same (logical) change. Hence the hash and, as they have separate instances, two different strings are computed. I'm trying to determine if it'd be a real improvement to change from string to something like a 128 bit hash or it'll be just wasting my time.

Edit: Version of Delphi is Delphi 7.0

show/hide this revision's text 1

Inmutable string in delphi, are they always?

As far as I know, strings are inmutable in Delphi. I kind of understand that means if you do:

string1 := 'Hello';
string1 := string1 + " World";

first string is destroyed and you get a reference to a new string "Hello World".

But what happens if you have the same string in different places arround your code?

I have a string hash assigned for identifying several variables, so for example a "change" is identified by a hash value of the properties of that change. That way its easy for me to check to "changes" for equality.

Now, each hash is computed separately (not all the properties are taken into account so that to separate instances can be equal even if they differ on some values).

The question is, how does Delphi handles those strings? If I compute to separate hashes to the same 10 byte length string, what do I get? Two memory blocks of 10 bytes or two references to the same memory block?

Edit: Version of Delphi is Delphi 7.0