Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
An explanation would be if the class in your DLL were duplicated (and thus
different) from the ones in your main EXE.
Using a BPL isntead of a DLL might solve that.
The following line seem to be an indication of that:
procedure RegisterUnit(dwUnit:PVOID); stdcall;
begin
du := TdwsUnit(dwUnit);
Original comment by zar...@gmail.com
on 25 Feb 2013 at 1:52
This is simple translation of instance to dll module.
dll should provide plugin functionality and therefor I need to pass dwsUnit
there somehow.
There is no duplicates there.
Original comment by oleg.top...@gmail.com
on 25 Feb 2013 at 3:30
InheritsFrom does a pointer check.
If the TDataSymbol is compiled once in the main executable, and once in the
DLL, there will be two distinct TDataSymbol classes, with distinct hierarchies.
To check that you could log IntToStr(Int64(TDataSymbol)) in the main exe and in
the dll (f.i. just before the assert). If there is no duplication, the two
numbers will be identical.
Original comment by zar...@gmail.com
on 25 Feb 2013 at 3:40
So, I cannot use dwScript to dynamically provide functions in outside DLL?
I have a form with dwsUnit, and it can be created multiply times. It is then
supplied to dll as a reference.
I can't understand how it can be complied twice.
Original comment by oleg.top...@gmail.com
on 25 Feb 2013 at 3:47
For that you have to use BPLs (which are a special form of DLLs where the
compiler takes care of not duplicating classes), the issue manifests itself
there, but it's bound to manifest itself in all code that relies on a checked
is/as/inheritsfrom, as well as in other situations.
A blind cast will get through and work only if you have binary compatibility
between the exe and the dll (ie. if they were compiled at the same time from
the same source), but if you require binary compatibility, you might as well
not have a dll.
As for it getting compiled twice, when you compile the EXE, it gets a full copy
of the DWScript source (and VCL, and RTL, etc.). When you compile a DLL (rather
than a BPL) the compiler compiles another full copy of the DWSCript source (and
RTL, and whatever your DLL uses), since it can't assume that DLL will be used
by your main EXE, or even a Delphi application (the DLL could be used by a C
app f.i.)
Original comment by zar...@gmail.com
on 25 Feb 2013 at 3:57
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
oleg.top...@gmail.com
on 25 Feb 2013 at 8:33