You could create a class with pseudo methods like this:
type
TMyDllClass = class
public
NameOfDllEntryPoint: TFunctionTypeOfDllEntryPoint;
constructor Create;
end;
constructor TMyDllClass.Create;
begin
inherited Create;
LibHandle := LoadLibrary('path\to.dll');
@NameOfDllEntryPoint := GetProcAddress(LibHandle, 'NameOfDllEntryPoint');
end;
MyDllClass := TMyDllClass.Create;
MyDllClass.NameOfDllEntryPoint(some, parameters);
This works fine, I have done it multiple times, e.g. for mitab.dll, libjpeg_turbo.dll and other dlls. The idea is to reduce cluttering the name space with global functions.
Note: For clarity I left out any error handling (e.g. if the DLL cannot be loaded or doesn't have the entry point). In this example this would result in an access violation because the NameOfDllEntryPoint field would not have been initialized.
MessageBox etc
are imported.LoadLibrary
more than once from the same process to the same DLL re-uses the same instance.