tdisque 0 Posted August 23, 2022 (edited) I have used C for years but I'm only now learning to use Delphi. I would appreciate any tips on potential pitfalls. I have seen examples using pointer dereferences, such as "*p" in C vs. "p^" in Delphi, but what is the Delphi equivalent of "p = p->next;"? I have tried converting some C code to Delphi, but I keep getting a "E2029 Statement expected but type found at line" message. As far as I can tell, type is a legal statement, Here is the code fragment: procedure TElements.Button1Click(Sender: TObject); begin // No element has more than 10 oxidation states Const MAX_OXIDATION_STATES:integer = 10; Const TOTAL_ELEMENTS:integer = 118; var AtomicNumber1:integer := 0; var AtomicNumber2:integer := 0; var leastCommonMultiple:integer; var ratio1:integer; var ratio2:integer; var Combinations:integer; var valence1:integer; var valence2:integer; var v1:integer; var v2:integer; var errorMessage:string; // Instantiate 118 objects, one for each element type AllElements = record Number: integer; // Atomic number Symbol: string; // Element symbol Name: string; // Element name AlphaSeq: integer; // Name alphabetical sequence number Mass: double; // Atomic number Oxidation: string; // Oxidation states end; Any suggestions? Thanks for any tips! Tom Edited August 24, 2022 by Sherlock Please consider using the coe tags for better readability Share this post Link to post
Remy Lebeau 1436 Posted August 23, 2022 (edited) 1 hour ago, tdisque said: what is the Delphi equivalent of "p = p->next;"? In C/C++, the '->' operator is primarily just a combination of the '*' dereference and '.' member-access operators (but can be overloaded in C++ for other purposes), eg the above can be written as follows instead and the functionality would be exactly the same: p = (*p).next; In Delphi, those same operations are expressed individually, there is no combination operator, eg: p := p^.next; However, in this case, the '^' is optional when accessing a member via a pointer, eg: p := p.next; Quote I have tried converting some C code to Delphi, but I keep getting a "E2029 Statement expected but type found at line" message. As far as I can tell, type is a legal statement, There is no such thing as inline type declarations in Delphi, so you must use the traditional 'type' section to define the local record type, eg: procedure TElements.Button1Click(Sender: TObject); type AllElements = record Number: integer; // Atomic number Symbol: string; // Element symbol Name: string; // Element name AlphaSeq: integer; // Name alphabetical sequence number Mass: double; // Atomic number Oxidation: string; // Oxidation states end; begin ... end; Or, move the declaration outside of the procedure, eg: type AllElements = record Number: integer; // Atomic number Symbol: string; // Element symbol Name: string; // Element name AlphaSeq: integer; // Name alphabetical sequence number Mass: double; // Atomic number Oxidation: string; // Oxidation states end; procedure TElements.Button1Click(Sender: TObject); begin ... end; That being said, I also notice is that you are using inline const/variable declarations when you don't actually need to. You are not using inline declarations the way they were intended to be used, so you may as well just use the more traditional 'const' and 'var' sections instead, eg: procedure TElements.Button1Click(Sender: TObject); type ... const // No element has more than 10 oxidation states MAX_OXIDATION_STATES: integer = 10; TOTAL_ELEMENTS: integer = 118; var AtomicNumber1: integer; AtomicNumber2: integer; leastCommonMultiple: integer; ratio1: integer; ratio2: integer; Combinations: integer; valence1: integer; valence2: integer; v1: integer; v2: integer; errorMessage: string; begin AtomicNumber1 := 0; AtomicNumber2 := 0; ... end; Edited August 23, 2022 by Remy Lebeau 1 Share this post Link to post
tdisque 0 Posted August 24, 2022 Thank you very much! If I can repay your kindness with any C or assembly language questions, I would be happy to do so. Share this post Link to post