Serial Port Component For Lazarus Effect
Description SQLitePass is a simple set of components designed for Lazarus-fpc and Delphi. It provides you an easy and fast access to SQLite databases, especially those created using Kexi, SQLiteExpert, SQLite Administrator, SQLiteToolbox or your favorite SQLite database manager.
Cast Of The Lazarus Effect
Robert Love has a book on Linux Systems Programming - that will cover this area and Love's books are generally good, so it is worth looking at.It's not entirely clear from your question, but if your concern is that there are specific calls to hardware controlling functions in your Windows application that make it difficult to port I would suggest that is a misplaced fear. Both Windows and Linux operate on the principle that the application level programmer should be kept away from the hardware and that all that should be handled by the operating system kernel and only be accessible to applications via system calls.
Mercedes w123 manual gearbox exploded diagram. As the kernels of different operating systems face similar demands from users/applications, they tend to have system calls that do the same sorts of things. It is necessary to match the system calls to one another but I can see no reason why that should be impossible.What may be more troublesome is that your Windows application may rely heavily on the Windows executive's windowing code/API. Again finding analogues for your code is not impossible but is likely to be a bit more complex e.g. In Linux this stuff is generally not handled in the kernel at all (unlike Windows).But then again, your code may be written against a portable toolkit/library like Qt which would make things a lot easier.Good luck in any case.
- Have you seen the Dataport Lazarus component set from Serbod?.serial port (UART, COM-port, FTDI). Your post prompted me to finally try compiling a Synapse project for Ultibo.
- Jan 23, 2017 LazSerial v0.2 Serial Port Component for Lazarus (windows and linux). By Jurassic Pork 03/2013 - 01/2017 This library is Free software; you can rediStribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of.