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Last Update of this page: September/29/1999
Amount of measured methods:
Conditional
compilation:
Fully supported.
Compiler symbols and switches are read from the compilers option file
(DOF).
Customer
suggestions:
Many customer
suggestions have been implemented in ProDelphi in the last two versions.
Compiler
versions:
ProDelphi supports
Delphi 2/3/4 and 5.
Documentation:
ProDelphi comes with a real User Guide (and not
with a slim online help).
Exclusion of parts of the program
from measurement:
Units or
Include files:
Handling of idle
times:
Idletimes produced by
some Windows-API calls are not measured, also idletimes of Delphi calls. See
list of handled functions in the manual.
History
function:
ProDelphi comes with
a built-in history function. The viewer shows by a colored grid, which functions
got faster and which got slower since the last storing of results into a history
file. By a mouse click on a result line of the viewers grid, the excact time is
displayed for the clicked procedure.
Industrial
approvement:
See my
homepage/authors activites/VICOS P500.
Integration into the Delphi tools
menu:
If ProDelphi is installed
with the setup program, it is automatically integrated into the Delphi tools
menu.
Local
Procedures:
Fully
supported.
Measurement
accuracy:
ProDelphi is
measuring very accurately. The measurement overhead is automatically removed
from the measured times. A sophisticated algorithym calculates the runtime used
for measurement at initialization time. You can easily check the accuracy of
ProDelphi by downloading the profiler tester. It consists of two programs: One,
so to say, manually measures the run-time of a few procedures and displays the
result. The second program is the same without measuring, it has to be profiled.
Compare the real runtime with the measurement result of ProDelphi.
Measurement
results:
The measured durations
are displayed either in CPU-Cycles or in a variable time format. Following time
formats are automatically selected:
Measuring runtimes in
DLL's:
Fully supported
Multiple profiling
directories:
Fully supported.
ProDelphi reads the options file (DOF) of Delphi and automatically scans all
directories in the search path + the directory of the DPR-file.
Online operating the
measurement:
Measurement can be
switched on and off at the programs runtime, also results can be stored online.
This speeds up the opimization process.
Object
orientation:
Specially
supported by the feature of adding the runtimes of all methods with the same
name (if the used object is the same).
Example: A method 'LoadFromDisk' calls the method
'LoadFromDisk' of the inherited class. In this case the runtimes of both classes
will be added.
Operating
systems:
ProDelphi is
compatible to Windows 95/98 and Windows NT.
Programming-API:
Measurement can be switched on and off at runtime.
Intermediate results can be stored on disk.
Security:
ProDelphi inserts statements into the source
files. If this process has a bug or in case of power failure, the sources might
be destroyed. Thats why it is strongly recommended to save all source code files
before profiling (e.g. by WinZip).
Setup:
ProDelphi is delivered with a comfortable setup
program. It copies all files into the appropriate directories, integrates
ProDelphi into the Delphi tools menu and creates an entry in the Windows list of
programs (Start menu / Programs).
Switching on and off of
measurement:
Simply done by
deleting a compiler symbol and recompilation. At runtime this is also possible
by the online operation window. Also intermediate measurement results can be
stored at runtime (see also Programming-API).
Upgrading:
If you decide to use ProDelphi, you can download
any upgrade or bug fix from my homepage. If you need ProDelphi for a larger
project and 20 measured procedures are not enough for you, you can oder the
professional version via ShareIt registration service. If you do so, you also
can download new versions from my homepage for free. They will automatically run
as professional version. (Buy one - get many).
Viewing of measurement
results:
Results can be either
displayed in CPU-cycles or in a variable time format. On a pentium with 500 MHz
the smallest time unit is 0.002╡s.
ProDelphi has THREE possibilities of viewing the measured
runtimes: