RADStudio 10.3 RIO Release 1 (10.3.1) With Keygen

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Takeshi Krueger

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Jul 14, 2024, 3:58:43 PM7/14/24
to mactetamans

Indy is not an Embarcadero product, so it is not included in Embarcadero's DocWiki. Indy documentation is available for download from Indy's website (although, it is a bit outdated, but there is effort under way to slowly bring it up-to-date in the future).

RADStudio 10.3 RIO Release 1 (10.3.1) With Keygen


Download File https://bytlly.com/2yLyav



I would suggest you download the XE5 release of Indy and do a diff against your XE4 version. You can download specific releases of Indy from Indy's SVN server directly, or the latest SVN revision from nightly SVN snapshots on Indy's Fulgan mirror. Instructions for accessing both are on Indy's website.

I can tell you that Indy 10.6.0 had some big interface changes over 10.5.x (I blogged about some of them), but XE4 also shipped with Indy 10.6 (10.6.0.4975, to be exact). I could not tell you offhand what the changes between the XE4 and XE5 releases were, so you will just have to run your own diffs.

Embarcadero releases of Indy from RAD Studio 2010 onwards (minus XE3, however) have been tagged in Indy's SVN. You can browse the SVN repository directly if you want to know which source code is in each release.

Because, when I launch the compiled release, it works of course, but only because the resources are linked with their full path to them. I suspect it won't work for someone else.God, I feel so stupid not to have thought about that in the first place...

I was really pumped with RAD Studio 10.4 Sydney was released in May. I have been rediscovering my love for Delphi lately and the 10.4 release sounded like it was going to be amazing. I stated back in May that Delphi 10.4 Sydney is the best tool for creating Windows Applications and I received more than a few negative responses (plus a number of positives ones as well.) I disregarded the negativity and greedily installed 10.4 just a few hours after its release.

Another area of focus in 10.4.1 was Custom Managed Records. This was an highly anticipated new feature initially targeted for the 10.3 Rio release but was pushed back to 10.4 Sydney. From the release notes, the latest versions improves Managed Records quality, including:

So far, the common Code Insight glitches that came along with the new Language Server Protocol support added to 10.4 have been smoothed over. This was a very large step forward in the development of the Delphi IDE and one of the major features of 10.4. Unfortunately, after many struggles with it, I previously disabled the feature on my system. I have my positive thinking cap on and I do not plan on ever turning it off again. For those that manage very large projects in Delphi, there have been a major increase in performance of the LSP-Based Code Insight in the 10.4.1 release. Code Completion is also much faster.

Come join our Delphi Developer Group on Telegram which has grown to over 1,100 members and is a great place to ask/answer Delphi related questions in a live-chat style interface. If you prefer Slack, join us on the Delphi Programmers Slack Channel which has grown to over 500 members and is mostly used for private member-to-member messaging. And because we believe in choice, you even join us on the Delphi Programmers Discord Server where we have over 600 members.

Last year I posted about the cool new inline variable feature of Delphi and referenced the upcoming LSP-based Code Insight in 10.4 and in a tongue-in-cheek manner I stated that Error Insight Shall...

I've had lots of enquiries recently about when Bookmarks and Navigator will have a version available for 10.3 - they've been updated and new features added for every release until now. I'm please to say they will be available with the upcoming version of RAD Studio (10.3.1) which is coming out soon.

The reason for for being included, and for the lack of news about a 10.3-compatible release in the past month, is that the plugins have been acquired by Embarcadero and so will now ship with the IDE itself.

This is great news. I wrote the plugins originally to add features I wanted to the IDE, and hundreds (thousands, actually!) of developers have given great feedback. It's great to know the features will be available to everyone. In addition, due to the pressures of work, I haven't had much time to maintain or extend them recently, and so having them under Embarcadero's wing means they'll live on and be developed as part of Delphi and C++Builder itself.

Now my Berlin reports "Access violation at address 07E8D047 in module 'ParnassusCoreEditor.dll'. Read of address 00000000." when I start the IDE. I get the same error when loading a project and then Bookmarks doesn't work.

I also get a bunch of errors when I open a form unit and then I get into "Access violation at address 20837CFB in module 'coreide240.bpl'. Read of address 00000018." which repeats indefinitely.

@David Millington Can you - or Embarcadero - please publish Bookmarks and Navigator 1.6 for older platforms? Or create a version that does not depend on share "Core" DLL? I think the community would very much appreciate it. I know I would.

It seems that the DLL loader logic first looks for the "XRio" DLL and has a fallback to the original name. That way the different DLLs can coexist in the same folder and the XRio renaming allows for future version, too.

Sorry for the dumb question, but where should this path be changed? Searching the registry for Parnassus yielded icy shivers down my spine (the bookmarks are actually stored in the registry), but no path that looked anything like yours @Uwe Raabe

The new release includes TeeChart Pro binary and source code installers for all development environments already supported and adds full support for RAD Studio 10 Seattle (RX/DX/CX).

TeeChart VCL/FMX customers with active license subscription may download the version from the Customer Download page.

If you'd like to try-out the new release you can follow this link to download the fully functional evaluation version.

The maintenance release adds full support for RAD Studio 10 Seattle (RX/DX/CX) and contains some new features, improvements and bug fixes. Follow this link to view the Release notes for this build.

Please use the Steema Support forum to send us feedback.

The 12.1 edition of RAD Studio comes hot on the heels of the feature-rich RAD Studio 12 Athens release. It will include the new C++Builder Win64 compiler and toolchain, along with significant enhancements to the IDE, an improved Delphi Android toolchain, and extensive quality improvements.

If you have any questions or want some extra information, complete the form below and one of the team will be in touch ASAP. If you have a specific use case, please let us know and we'll help you find the right solution faster.

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Embarcadero has released RAD Studio XE4, its suite of development tools for Window, Web and for the first time, Apple iOS. iOS support first appeared in an earlier release, but in preview, and the current effort works using a new LLVM-based ARM compiler so is somewhat unlike the preview. Individual products such as Delphi XE4 are also available separately.

I ran up the new RAD Studio on a Parallels VM on a Mac, a VM on a Mac being the best way to try cross-platform development for OS X and iOS. The new IDE immediately presents you with instructions on setting up for iOS development (though I am not a fan of videos, preferring clear text instructions) but I no problems configuring the Mac agent (called PAServer) which makes this work. Start a new mobile app and you can pick a starter template or begin with a blank canvas.

As I noted earlier, it seems to me that Delphi developers are either Windows developers using the tried and trusted VCL (in which case there is very little for them in XE4), or developers who are targeting mobile platforms and using the cross-platform FireMonkey framework in order to share code between Windows, Mac and mobile. I guess it is also possible that developers targeting iOS alone will be so taken with Delphi or C++ Builder that they will come in as new users.

The key questions then are about the quality of the FireMonkey framework and the iOS support. It is hard for me to be objective, since I know Delphi from of old and it is a familiar environment. Delphi or C++ Builder for iOS has obvious attractions for such developers. I would be intrigued though to know what an Objective C or even a JavaScript developer would make of Delphi, coming to it fresh. I am sceptical whether an Xcode developer would find enough productivity benefit in Delphi and FireMonkey to want to move over, and suspect also that many would not be impressed by the FireMonkey approach to iOS controls, which are generally custom drawn rather than true native, or faked completely like the Segmented Control which you are meant to put together from SpeedButtons with segmented styling, as explained in the Delphi iOS tutorial:

Intensive computing is dominate by Windows. For windows, we find two environments that enable good productivity: Visual Studio from Microsoft and RAD Studio.
RAD Studio is becoming cross-platform while Visual Studio is for windows only. The Delphi compiler is very good on Windows but it is a very good news as well that Embarcadero will use the LLVM compiler for other platforms because LLVM compiler compiles on all platforms available to date (windows, mac, ios, android, linux) and even .net!

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