0

I created a function that has a Char represented by a variable named fsinal:

type
  TCalculo = class(TObject)
  private
    fnumero1 : integer;
    fnumero2 : integer;
    fsinal   : char;
  public

I then created a method to get this Char:

function getSinal   : char;
    
function TCalculo.getSinal: char;
begin
  result := fsinal;
end;

Whenever I rum my program and press any button, I receive an error

access violation at address 005FD704, read of address 0000000C:

image

What am I doing wrong?

Whole code:

https://github.com/murillojndem/Calculadora/blob/master/Unit1.pas

4
  • 1
    TCalculo is a class and in order to use it (except class variables, methods, and properties) you first need to create an instance (=object) of it. I bet you forgot that. (calculo := TCalculo.Create creates an object of this class and assigns a pointer to it to the calculo variable, which you then can use after this line. Before this line, calculo is either a nil pointer (if it is a global variable or a class member) or a "random garbage" pointer (if it is a local variable).) Nov 23, 2020 at 20:01
  • 1
    A link to the code in an off-site location is not acceptable here. All relevant content needs to be here, in the question itself, in the form of a minimal reproducible example. You'll find your experiences here will be much better if you spend some time taking the tour and reading the help center pages to learn how the site works before you begin posting.
    – Ken White
    Nov 24, 2020 at 3:33
  • Where should I add the "calculo := TCalculo.create" though? Anywhere I try to add seems to return me errors. Nov 24, 2020 at 17:35
  • You need to create the object before you use it. You then need to free it after you are done using it. This is the general truth. Remy gave you two very explicit examples in his answer. Nov 24, 2020 at 19:58

1 Answer 1

2

An Access Violation error near address $00000000 usually means you are accessing memory via a nil pointer.

In this case, address $0000000C is 12 bytes from address $00000000. The TCalculo.getSinal() method is accessing the fsinal member, which is at an offset of 12 bytes from the start of the TCalculo class (offset 0 is a hidden pointer to TCalculo's vtable, offset 4 is the fnumero1 member, offset 8 is the fnumero2 member, and finally offset 12 is the fsinal member).

result := fsinal; is the same as result := Self.fsinal;, where the compiler adds the offset of fsinal (12) to the address that Self is pointing at, and then dereferences the resulting address to access the value of fsinal. In your case, you are calling TCalculo.getSinal() via a nil pointer to a TCalculo object, so the method's Self pointer is nil (0), thus dereferencing the address of fsinal (0+12) causes an AV error.

In your TForm code, all of your TButton.OnClick handlers are calling getSinal() on a global calculo variable that is never being initialized to point at a valid TCalculo object. Since the calculo variable is declared in global memory, it is default-initialized to nil at program startup.

type
  TCalculo = class(TObject)
    ...
  end;

var
  Form1  : TForm1;
  calculo: TCalculo; // <-- initialized to nil here!

...

procedure TForm1.Button0Click(Sender: TObject);
begin
  if calculo.getSinal = 'a' then // <-- calculo is still nil here!
  ...
end;

... and so on...

You need to add a call to TCalculo.Create(), either in the TForm.OnCreate event (and conversely, Free the object in the TForm.OnDestroy event), eg:

procedure TForm1.FormCreate(Sender: TObject);
begin
  calculo := TCalculo.Create;
end;

procedure TForm1.FormDestroy(Sender: TObject);
begin
  calculo.Free;
end;

Or, use the unit's initialization section instead (and conversely, the finalization section), eg:

implementation

...

initialization
  calculo := TCalculo.Create;
finalization
  calculo.Free;

end.
3
  • Thenks for the detailed response, really appreciate it. But I did the same thing here and got no problem, why? github.com/murillojndem/Calculadora-de-notas-N2-OOP-/blob/… Nov 23, 2020 at 21:05
  • @MurilloJorge: No, you clearly have calculo := TCalcula.create; on line 48. Nov 23, 2020 at 21:11
  • Which is a memory leak. After the 1st click of Button1, the calculo object is never being Free'd. And each subsequent click is creating a new TCalcula object without Free'ing the previous object. Nov 23, 2020 at 21:27

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