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.
TCalculo
is a class and in order to use it (exceptclass
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 thecalculo
variable, which you then can use after this line. Before this line,calculo
is either anil
pointer (if it is a global variable or a class member) or a "random garbage" pointer (if it is a local variable).)