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Delphi Cookbook

You're reading from   Delphi Cookbook 50 hands-on recipes to master the power of Delphi for cross-platform and mobile development on Windows, Mac OS X, Android, and iOS

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783559589
Length 328 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Daniele Teti Daniele Teti
Author Profile Icon Daniele Teti
Daniele Teti
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Toc

Table of Contents (9) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Delphi Basics FREE CHAPTER 2. Become a Delphi Language Ninja 3. Going Cross Platform with FireMonkey 4. The Thousand Faces of Multithreading 5. Putting Delphi on the Server 6. Riding the Mobile Revolution with FireMonkey 7. Using Specific Platform Features Index

Using iOS Objective-C SDK classes


Just like we saw about Android in the previous recipe, Delphi can access the iOS SDK as well. In this section, we'll talk about the mechanisms that the compiler offers to import classes from the iOS SDK. This is not a standard recipe, but is more of a showcase of the possibilities offered by the Delphi compiler, and the process needed to fully use them when dealing with the OS built-in libraries. The mechanism is similar to the Android ones, but there are some notable differences.

Getting ready

In Objective-C, all the classes have NSObject as a common ancestor. The iOS SDK is composed of some frameworks. The iOS framework comprises of a number of classes specialized for a single purpose. For example, UIKit is the framework containing all the basic classes related to the UI; the iAd framework contains all the stuff related to advertising, and MapKit wraps up all the mapping-related classes.

Note that Objective-C uses the NSString objects while Delphi uses strings...

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