Apple has been planning moving all macOS applications to 64-bit for years and informing users and developers that 32-bit macOS applications will be deprecated soon. And the time has come. When using macOS Mojave and trying to run 32-bit applications (the ones built with Delphi until 10.3.1, for example), users are receiving the following message:
That was significantly improved in this new update. If you are already using previous Delphi Rio 10.3 or 10.3.1, I believe you will notice the difference, with a smoother and snappier IDE in this regard.
RADStudio 10.3 RIO Release 1 (10.3.1) With Keygen
Stunning Windows Applications with VCLThe Visual Component Library (VCL) offers easy and visual development of the application user interface, and 10.3 brings new updates to keep your apps looking modern and fresh.
If you have already installed 10.3 Rio released in November 2018, installing build 4899 requires a full uninstall and reinstall to preserve your settings. You can also preserve settings with the Settings Migration Tool.
Summary: Applications built for iOS 13 with RAD Studio 10.3.3 require the user to restart their FireMonkey iOS application on their iOS device after switching between the iOS light and dark theme in iOS settings.
Summary: This patch fixes a few issues related with the RAD Studio IDE in 10.3, including problems building an UWP app for the Windows Store, missing application configuration options in C++Builder, the lack of DBExpress Enterprise drivers in Data Explorer, and an incorrect configuration for the Android NDK.
Both Xcode 8.3 and Xcode 8.2 can be installed on the same Mac. You can develop and build your iOS application using RAD Studio 10.2 with Xcode 8.3 and the iOS 10.3 SDK. When you are ready to create the iOS App Store distribution file for your iOS application, run xcode-select -s to switch to Xcode 8.2.
If you installed 10.3.1 in your VM with the webinstaller, you can simply download the new webinstaller for 10.3.2 and run it. It will still automatically uninstall the previous version, but if you select to keep the configuration, it will remain configured for 10.3.2.
For example, when updating the Delphi IDE from version 10.3.1 to the current version 10.3.3 with the ISO installer (as 10.3.1 had also been installed with the ISO), I suppose that the version 10.3.1 must be UNINSTALLED first (e.g. by using the Windows Control Panel) and select the option to KEEP THE 10.3.1 IDE SETTINGS.
I run the installer (existing version was 10.3.2). It offered to upgrade, modify or to uninstall. I selected modify, it did something which ended up with missing bds.exe, so I run it again, uninstalled that whatever version was there (by leaving the registry) and installed the 10.3.3. All settings were preserved and now I have 10.3.3 running.
@Erix A. @PeterPanettone @Darian Miller I haven't used ISO for a while... but Delphi updates (including web installer) always required complete uninstall and reinstall procedure. You can only use Modify/Repair if you are modifying or repairing with the same installer you originally installed. If that is 10.3.2, then you can only use it for modifying 10.3.2 features.
If you have already installed 10.3 Rio (November 22nd, 2018), 10.3 Rio - Release 1 (February 14th, 2019) or 10.3 Rio - Release 2 (July 18th, 2019), installing 10.3 Rio - Release 3 requires a full uninstall and reinstall. As part of the uninstall process, you will see an option for preserving your settings. Separately, you can also preserve settings with Settings Migration Tool.
Delphi 2, released in 1996, supported 32-bit Windows environments and bundled with Delphi 1 to retain 16-bit Windows 3.1 application development. New Quickreport components replacing Borland ReportSmith. Delphi 2 also introduced:
In late 2005 Delphi 2006 (Delphi 10, also Borland Developer Studio 4.0) was released combining development of C# and Delphi.NET, Delphi Win32 and C++ (Preview when it was shipped but stabilized in Update 1) into a single IDE. It was much more stable than Delphi 8 or Delphi 2005 when shipped, and improved further with the release of two updates and several hotfixes. Delphi 2006 included:
Delphi 2007 (Delphi 11), the first version by CodeGear, was released on March 16, 2007. The Win32 personality was released first, before the .NET personality of Delphi 2007 based on .NET Framework 2.0 was released as part of the CodeGear RAD Studio 2007 product. For the first time, Delphi could be downloaded from the internet and activated with a license key. New features included:
On April 15, 2014, Embarcadero released RAD Studio XE6, which included Delphi XE6 and C++Builder. It allows developers to create natively compiled apps for all platforms for, desktop, mobile, and wearable devices like Google Glass, with a single C++ or Object Pascal (Delphi) codebase. RAD Studio XE6 added:
On September 2, 2014, Embarcadero released RAD Studio XE7, which included Delphi XE7 and C++Builder. Its biggest development enabled Delphi/Object Pascal and C++ developers to extend existing Windows applications and build apps that connect desktop and mobile devices with gadgets, cloud services, and enterprise data and API by compiling FMX projects for both desktop and mobile devices. XE7 also included:
But, to install several DAC products to the same IDE, it is necessary to make sure that all DAC products have the same common engine (BPL files) version. The latest versions of DAC products or versions with the same release date always have the same version of the common engine and can be installed to the same IDE.
Then use the sdkmanager command-line tool (in the tools\bin folder) to install everything you need. Notice I am installing the Android 26 Platform. This is the version you want to use with 10.3 Rio. It meets the new Target SDK requirements and still gives your Android apps maximum compatibility. This is the version 10.3 Rio is designed to work with.
Here are the links for the Delphi and C++Builder projects. They were built and tested in with 10.3.1 Rio. I also compiled some updated details on how to build the project and how to install and test on Emteria.OS.
A lot going on today for Delphi. Celebrating 24 years as being our favorite development tool, and also got the 10.3.1 Rio release! I wanted to do something fun for today, but I keep getting all wrapped up with webinars and other things, so this is a bit last minute, but still fun I think . .. .
Before 10.3 Rio when you used a a platform-native control, like TWebBrowser or TMediaPlayer, you were not able to put other controls on top of them. That stacking of controls is knowns as Z-Order. This was especially annoying when you were using them with the TMultiView (one of my favorite controls), because the drawer would slide out under instead of over the platform-native control. There were ways around it, but it was still frustrating.
10.3 Rio is in beta (which means these features are subject to change) and available to update subscription customers. Once it is released you can learn more about all of these features in the DocWiki. Also, if you are already using Platform native ControlType on iOS or Windows then those control will take advantage of the Android Platform native ControlType right away! 2ff7e9595c
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