Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

A quick way to remove properties from .dfm files in Delphi

I have recently modified one of my components, and it so happens it is no longer using one of the properties it used before.

However, those properties are written in multiple .dfm files throughout the project. Now, when i try to compile the project, i get "Error reading .: Property <...> does not exist"

The complicated part is that the property value is binary data (stored in multiple lines), and i cant just delete it with Delphi replace or notepad++ regexp (since they are single-line based).

So my question would be:

Are there any third party tools or ways to easily remove properties from multiple .dfm files?

like image 502
ertx Avatar asked Mar 02 '12 07:03

ertx


3 Answers

Try this tool Delphi DFM properties remover, works with old versions of delphi but maybe can help you.

like image 83
RRUZ Avatar answered Nov 11 '22 21:11

RRUZ


One possible approach is to modify your component so that it is capable of simply ignoring these properties. That way you don't have to hunt them down in each and every .dfm file.

For example:

type
  TIgnoreFormPropertyHelper = class
  public
    class procedure IgnoreBooleanProperty(Reader: TReader);
    class procedure IgnoreIntegerProperty(Reader: TReader);
  end;

{ TIgnoreFormPropertyHelper }

class procedure TIgnoreFormPropertyHelper.IgnoreBooleanProperty(Reader: TReader);
begin
  Reader.ReadBoolean;
end;

class procedure TIgnoreFormPropertyHelper.IgnoreIntegerProperty(Reader: TReader);
begin
  Reader.ReadInteger;
end;

type
  TMyComponent = class(...)
  ....  
  protected
    procedure DefineProperties(Filer: TFiler); override;
  ....  

procedure TMyComponent.DefineProperties(Filer: TFiler);
begin
  inherited;
  Filer.DefineProperty('MyLegacyBooleanProperty',
    TIgnoreFormPropertyHelper.IgnoreBooleanProperty, nil, False);
  Filer.DefineProperty('MyLegacyIntegerProperty',
    TIgnoreFormPropertyHelper.IgnoreIntegerProperty, nil, False);
end;
like image 24
David Heffernan Avatar answered Nov 11 '22 23:11

David Heffernan


The Jedi VCL contains a tool called DFMCleaner:

DFMCleaner is a tool to remove unsupported properties from DFMs. If you save a dfm file in one version of Delphi and want to use it in an earlier version, chances are there are some unsupported properties in it, generating an error when the form is opened in Delphi. What's even worse, if the dfm is part of a design-time package, Delphi will install the package without errors but when you try to access the form at design-time (f ex if the form is used by a property editor), Delphi generates an AV instead.

It is located in jvcl-install\devtools\DFMCleaner (project with source code and example configuration file)

like image 22
mjn Avatar answered Nov 11 '22 22:11

mjn