<div>6. To connect to a bindingSource, open up the Chart Editor that you wish to modify and select the Series that has previously been added and go to its Datasource tab. If you click on the Dataset tab you can select the bindingSource to which to connect that Series. In the following selection boxes, you can relate the different source fields to the X and Y series valuelists. See Fig. 2.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Modify region query:</div><div></div><div> contiparam is the continent that you wish to view, sourced from the label of the Continents Chart value. One could use the index value or some other variable if that were to make a better index for the query.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>Steema TeeChart Pro VCL FMX Full Source 2017.20.170306</div><div></div><div>Download:
https://t.co/raNV1r25lJ </div><div></div><div></div><div>TeeChart is a charting library for programmers, developed and managed by Steema Software of Girona, Catalonia, Spain.[1] It is available as commercial and non-commercial software. TeeChart has been included in most Delphi and C++Builder products since 1997,[2] and TeeChart Standard currently is part of Embarcadero RAD Studio 11 Alexandria.[3] TeeChart Pro version is a commercial product that offers shareware releases for all of its formats, TeeChart.Lite for .NET [4] is a free charting component for the Microsoft Visual Studio .NET community and TeeChart for PHP [5] is an open-source library for PHP environments. The TeeChart Charting Library offers charts, maps and gauges[6] in versions for Delphi VCL/FMX, ActiveX, C# for Microsoft Visual Studio .NET, Java and PHP. Full source code has always been available for all versions except the ActiveX version. TeeChart's user interface is translated into 38 languages.[7]</div><div></div><div></div><div>TeeChart's first ActiveX version named "version 3" too, to match the VCL version's nomenclature, was released in 1998.[8] The version was optimised to work with Microsoft's Visual Studio v97 and v6.0 developer suites that include Visual Basic and Microsoft Visual C++ programming languages. Support for new programming environments followed with TeeChart's first native C# version for Microsoft Visual Studio .NET released in 2002[8] and TeeChart.Lite for .NET, a free charting component, released for Visual Studio.NET in 2003[8] and supporting too, Mono (programming). Steema Software released the first native TeeChart Java (programming language) version in 2006[8] and TeeChart's first native PHP version was released in 2009 and published as open-source in June 2010.[8] Mobile versions of TeeChart, for Android (operating system) devices and Windows Phone 7 devices were released during the first half of 2011.[8] In 2012 TeeChart extended functionality to iPhone/iPad and BlackBerry OS devices and a new JavaScript version was released in the same year to support HTML5 Canvas. In 2013 Steema launched TeeChart for .NET Chart for Windows Store applications and included support for Microsoft's Windows Phone 8 mobile platform.[8] TeeChart for Xamarin.Forms written with 100% C# code and cross-platform support for .NET desktops, Windows Phone, iOS and Android was released in 2014. Also since 2014 Webforms charts now offers HTML5 interactivity.[8]</div><div></div><div></div><div>Books and information sources that include substantial sections about working with the Delphi version of TeeChart include "Mastering Delphi 6" by Marco Cantù,[20] "C++ Builder 5 developer's guide",[21] a video Delphi Tutorial on charting JPEG compression[22] and support forums and reference pages at TeeChart Support Forums.[23] Non-English language document sources include, in Czech "Myslíme v jazyku Delphi 7: knihovna zkušeného programátora" by Marco Cantù,[24] and Chinese, Delphi 6,[25] Delphi,[26] and Delphi 5.[27]</div><div></div><div></div><div>For Apple iOS support, you require TeeChart source code included with the TeeChart Pro version from Steema Software. See the TeeChart FeatureMatrix at the Steema web site for more details.</div><div></div><div></div><div>TeeChart for .NET offers charting controls for a myriad of charting requirements including important vertical areas such as financial, scientific and statistical. It handles your data, creating informative and attractive charts, seamlessly across a variety of platforms including Windows Forms, WPF,
ASP.NET with HTML5/Javascript rendering, Universal Windows Platform (UWP) and Blazor. TeeChart for .NET C# code may be reused with Steema's mobile TeeChart products for Xamarin to reach Windows Phone, Android and iOS directly or via Xamarin's Forms PCL platform. TeeChart for .NET source code is available as an option.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>The code is added inline to the Chart code before render. The source-link path to the additional .js file that supports the feature, teechart-animations.js, is added as an additional source link. The way the source link is called here is currently supported when using the WebChart component only, but the functionality has now been added for the September release to fully support MVC widgets.</div><div></div><div></div><div>The grid allows you easily and fast manage information, connect to data sources and display data. The feature set includes locked columns, searching, filtering, sorting and grouping data, master-detail view, draggable selections, and grid scrolling. Includes 100% source code.</div><div></div><div></div><div>TeeChart Pro VCL allows you to create general-purpose and specialised chart and graphing applications for all areas including business, engineering, financial, statistical, scientific, medical, real-time, and the web. Over 60 chart types in 2D and 3D for data visualisation, 56 mathematical, statistical and financial functions for you to choose from together with an unlimited number of axes and 30 Palette components. TeeChart Pro VCL full 100% Delphi source code is available.</div><div></div><div></div><div>If this thread is only a small foreshadowing of how the community (or rather individuals) would react and respond to an open source project and how things are getting discussed I have to say that I would not want to be part of it.</div><div></div><div></div><div>A good open source project has strong management and leadership, and those contributors that can fit in and add to the development effort are facilitated. You don't just hand control to random collaborators.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Stefan's point about open source collaborators is spot on. Good programmers aren't going to spend their time on open source projects unless it's rewarding and fun. I certainly could never see myself working with the OP here.</div><div></div><div></div><div>1. We get posts here, Reddit, etc. along the lines of "Please help me install Borland Database Engine on Windows 10" all the time. A large number of the Delphi applications being maintained today are being maintained on old versions of Delphi and the companies responsible for them have no desire to spend anything to modernize them. For example, the Melissa and Doug toy company in the United States uses an in-house ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning) program written and still maintained in Delphi 7.</div><div></div><div></div><div>1B. Again, a "skilled developer" can't just look at one million lines of undocumented code (that might be older than they are) and fix it. It could take years for a dedicated open source community to work their way through and document that code. Even then, the only sane options would be to massively refactor and modernize it or, again more likely, simply start over.</div><div></div><div></div><div>1C. Who would be in charge of the code? Would Embarcadero oversee it? If so, they might not approve changes. And they're unlikely to want to give up control, as that would be giving up control of the language. Going back to Firebird, they have a poor history of properly supporting open source code, and Marc Hoffman said that one EMBT employee said during discussions "We own Pascal." Not quite the mindset required to turn over control of their compiler/language to a third party.</div><div></div><div></div><div>What libraries is Delphi lacking? Almost anything that doesn't involve grids (Delphi users are obsessed with grids). Serious numeric software (although you can pay $1600 for a bundle of Dew Research's matrix library, sci/stat function library, 3 basic data mining algorithms and Steema's TeeChart). Machine learning libraries. Financial libraries. Let's go smaller - I'm interested in making a media player. Delphi lacks a music file tag manipulation library (that's post-unicode and documented), audio manipulation library, replay gain library, cover art library, etc., all of which I can find on other platforms as open source.</div><div></div><div></div><div>I'm working on another pet project now that involves data analysis and machine learning and if successful will require interacting with websites. I'd like to host it on a Linux Virtual Private Server eventually, which means $3500 for Delphi Enterprise. As mentioned above, the Dew Research bundle with source is $1600, bringing us up to $5100. Now let's add in Steema's TeeBi for some basic data manipulation abilities to clean and transform the data, which is $279. Wait, the only plugin it works with out of the box to export to Excel is TMS' FlexCel. So unless we want to find an open source Delphi Excel library and integrate it ourselves, that's another $141USD. Now we're up to $5520. A capable profiler? Smartbear AQTime Pro - another $600. Now we're at $6120. Let's toss in HelpNDoc for documentation for another $280USD. Now we're at $6400 so far. I want some neural networks... Boris Mitov has 1980's-era Kohonen self-organizing feature maps and basic backpropagation for $389 without source or $1369 with source. That's madness; I coded both algorithms circa 1994 for a school project in Turbo Pascal. Let's use FANN instead, which is an open source library that implements some improvements to basic backpropagation and has a fast C core. There's also an open source implementation of the NEAT neural algorithm for Delphi, but not the next-gen HyperNEAT. Oh well. Genetic programming? RiverSoftAVG has a decent library with basic features for $150. So $6550 so far and we haven't looked at logging or databases. We'll need to scrape and parse HTML - DIHtmlParser is $123 with source code but is very low-level. There's a higher-level parser on Github, but the only documentation is in Japanese. There's an "HTML Component Library" available that seems rather nice, but it's bundled with a lot I wouldn't need, raising the price to $350. Come to think of it, once all of this comes together and is working I'm going to need a high-level process to manage all of the various software tasks - downloading data, parsing data, processing data, interacting with the right websites at the right time, not launching a process that depends on another that failed, etc. Sadly, there simply aren't any "pipeline " libraries for Delphi at any price.</div><div></div><div> dd2b598166</div>