aehimself 396 Posted May 2, 2022 Hello, We just met a strange issue and was wondering if anyone can explain why it is happening. The below code throws a stack overflow, as the compiler doesn't make a difference between TDateTime and Integer and keeps calling the first method: program Project1; {$APPTYPE CONSOLE} {$R *.res} uses System.SysUtils, System.DateUtils; function GetDay(dt: TDateTime): string; Overload; begin Result := GetDay(DayOfTheWeek(dt)); end; function GetDay(i: Integer): string; Overload; const LDays: array[1..7] of string = ('H', 'K', 'S', 'C', 'P', 'S', 'V'); begin Result := LDays[I]; end; begin WriteLn(GetDay(Today)); end. It works perfectly if you turn it to a dummy class and publish these methods as class functions: Type x = Class class function GetDay(dt: TDateTime): string; Overload; class function GetDay(i: Integer): string; Overload; End; It also works if you push these two methods in a separate unit with proper Interface section: unit Unit1; interface function GetDay(dt: TDateTime): string; overload; function GetDay(i: Integer): string; overload; implementation I guess it'll have something to do on how overloads are interpreted in the implementation area...? Delphi 10.4, 10.4.2 and 11 are producing the same symptom. Share this post Link to post
Der schöne Günther 316 Posted May 2, 2022 (edited) The reason is that function GetDay(dt: TDateTime) doesn't yet know about the other overload. You either have to replace their order or, better, add a definition like you did when you added their definition in the interface section of the unit. Edited May 2, 2022 by Der schöne Günther 1 Share this post Link to post
Stefan Glienke 2006 Posted May 2, 2022 Nothing strange at all but standard pascal behavior - compiler only sees what has been declared so far. Possible solutions: - change implementation order - declare in separate unit interface part - use forward 1 1 Share this post Link to post
Fr0sT.Brutal 900 Posted May 11, 2022 I always try to declare methods so that most calls jump "up" (to the beginning of a unit). Share this post Link to post