I judge my blog to be fairly powerful in that it is attracting all kinds of Delphi developers, so I'm gonna put out a survey now, that someone raised in a Borland newsgroup.
How many of you would be interested in a native 64-bit Delphi compiler that is targetting Win64, not through .NET?
In how many months would you purchase such a piece of software, when it appears on the market? Now, 6 months, 12 months, 18 months?
If you are not interested in a native 64-bit Delphi compiler, why not?
To give your response, click on the Feedback link below this posting.
You can also give your votes here, at Quality Central, 7324.
In 2017, with the release of Delphi 10.2 Tokyo, Embarcadero introduced a specialized implementation of the Observer pattern into the System.Classes unit. While it has been in the wild for 9 years, it remains a "hidden" architecture for many, primarily because it serves as the invisible engine behind LiveBindings. Other than live bindings, you can also use the Observer pattern as a way to update component settings to the Windows registry, an .ini file, or persist it elsewhere.
System.Classes