21

I'm trying to create a child class of TForm with

  1. a special constructor for certain cases, and
  2. a default constructor that will maintain compatibility with current code.

This is the code I have now:

interface
  TfrmEndoscopistSearch = class(TForm)
  public
    /// original constructor kept for compatibility
    constructor Create(AOwner : TComponent); overload; override;
    /// additional constructor allows for a caller-defined base data set
    constructor Create(AOwner : TComponent; ADataSet : TDataSet; ACaption : string = ''); overload;
  end;

It seems to work, but I always get the compiler warning:

[Warning] test.pas(44): Method 'Create' hides virtual method of base type 'TCustomForm'
  • Adding "overload;" after the second constructor won't compile. "[Error] test.pas(44): Declaration of 'Create' differs from previous declaration".
  • making the second constructor a class function compiles without any errors or warnings, but dies with an access violation at runtime (all member vars are nil).
0

3 Answers 3

33

There's a really easy way to avoid this. Give your new constructor a different name. Unlike some other popular languages, Delphi has named constructors; you don't have to call them Create. You could call your new one CreateWithDataset and not interfere with the virtual Create constructor at all.

TfrmEndoscopistSearch = class(TForm)
  /// original constructor kept for compatibility
  constructor Create(AOwner: TComponent); override;
  /// additional constructor allows for a caller-defined base data set
  constructor CreateWithDataset(AOwner: TComponent; ADataSet: TDataSet; ACaption: string = '');
end;

In fact, unless you're instantiating this class polymorphically, you don't even need the original constructor. You could declare your new one like this:

TfrmEndoscopistSearch = class(TForm)
  /// additional constructor allows for a caller-defined base data set
  constructor Create(AOwner: TComponent; ADataSet: TDataSet; ACaption: string = ''); reintroduce;
end;

Attempting to call the one-argument constructor directly on TfrmEndoscopistSearch would yield a compilation error.


(Creating it polymorphically would generally involve using Application.CreateForm:

Application.CreateForm(TfrmEndoscopistSearch, frmEndoscopistSearch);

That always calls the one-argument virtual constructor introduced in TComponent. Unless it's your main form, you don't need to do that. I've written about my feelings on Application.CreateForm before.)

3
  • This is probably the most appropriate solution, but it isn't the answer to the question. Part of the exercise is to fix the problem and not have to change any of the other 10-or-so files that already use one or the other form of create(). I'm merging this form together from two different projects and didn't want to fork it. Nov 20, 2009 at 13:49
  • The answer is valid but it might be a bit dangerous. If a 3rd party user uses the code he might call (by accident) the standard constructor (Create) instead of the new one.
    – IceCold
    May 1, 2020 at 20:10
  • I don't see how that can be considered "dangerous," @Migrate. In my answer, I point out that the original constructor is kept for compatibility. That is, it's for compatibility with code that wants to call the original constructor. If it's legitimate to want to do that, then it's impossible to tell whether it was "by accident." But, if compatibility isn't a concern, then the second code block in this answer already demonstrates how to prevent people from calling the original constructor in limited circumstances. So where's the danger? May 2, 2020 at 5:11
21

Try adding reintroduce before the second overload, like this:

  TfrmEndoscopistSearch = class(TForm)
  public
    /// original constructor kept for compatibility
    constructor Create(AOwner : TComponent); overload; override;
    /// additional constructor allows for a caller-defined base data set
    constructor Create(AOwner : TComponent; ADataSet : TDataSet; ACaption : string = ''); reintroduce; overload;
  end;

This compiles in Turbo Delphi. I needed the public to make it compile because overloading of published methods is restricted.

2
  • bango! The "reintroduce" keyword is exactly what is needed. The original constructor is also needed because it sets the data set to the proper default value. Nov 20, 2009 at 13:56
  • For people around still wondering the magic behind the keywords, the "overload" is because we have the two functions (constructors) with the same name in the same class. "Override" is because the first constructor overrides the original constructor (in the parent class) and "reintroduce" is to shut up the compiler warning (we tell the compiler "it's ok, I know what I am doing. It is not a mistake.").
    – IceCold
    Feb 21, 2022 at 7:55
7
constructor Create(AOwner:Tcomponent;str:string);overload;
... 
constructor TfrmEndoscopistSearch.Create(AOwner: Tcomponent; str: string);
    begin
    inherited Create(AOwner);
    showmessage(str);
    end;

This should do the trick

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.