Wow such a good timing for your series because I just need to learn delphi for my bachelor thesis 😅 ty for that
@Alexzwk0009 ай бұрын
You are my saviour in IT
@MrLongITandCAT9 ай бұрын
Glad the videos are helping!
@UnknownMFe7 ай бұрын
Thank youu. This was much more helpful than the 8 hour tutorial I tried to start yesterday :)
@fukk_nt7 ай бұрын
Also tried watching the 8 hour one
@Th3_M.B7 ай бұрын
Lol with that glasses kid 😅
@UnknownMFe7 ай бұрын
@@Th3_M.B oh, you saw the same one xD
@ksxdddhung Жыл бұрын
your videos are really amazing, looking forward to your full course.
@MrLongITandCAT Жыл бұрын
You can download links to all videos using our video library. Download it here: tinyurl.com/MrLongVideoLibraryIT
@mevaser7704 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for your well explained tutorial!
@asadbelali432 жыл бұрын
Could you please make a video for difference between 2010 & upper version
@lancemarchetti86732 жыл бұрын
Nice!
@MuhammadYusuf-eq8xi2 жыл бұрын
could you make videos on IT pat 2022
@MrLongITandCAT2 жыл бұрын
Hi. We have a whole playlist of PAT TIPS that you can use (see link below). More TIP videos will be added this year. Go look at: kzbin.info/www/bejne/a5zUhoSPnqhoicU
@bartonstano93272 жыл бұрын
Delphi is Object Pascal; Pascal was DESIGNED as a language for teaching programming.
@gammyhorse2 жыл бұрын
Best programming language ever!
@intuit132 жыл бұрын
Pascal was designed (in the 1960's) for teaching STRUCTURED programming. It was the language of choice in most of academia until about the mid 1990s (around when Java came out and object oriented programming was becoming more and more popular). Pascal was replaced in most of the world's schools/universities by the early 2000's. In the US, for example, Java replaced Delphi for the AP Comp Science program used throughout the high schools all over the country. Java and OOP was exploding, and by the mid 2000's almost no one was using Pascal anymore outside of a couple EU countries. Since you can use any language to teach programming, it was considered best to use a language that was based around current techniques (OOP) and actually used in the workforce (Java has been the #1 language in the world until very recently, according to things like the TIOBE index, etc). I am REALLY REALLY surprised South Africa is using DELPHI (actual delphi...with Embarcadero's proprietary software instead of using the free/OS Lazarus IDE) when it's one of very few modern languages NOT based on C-style syntax (which is the one glaring difference between learning Delphi/Pascal as a first language and using something more recent/popular). There's that and also there's the fact that Python , which is arguably the easiest language to learn on theplanet and has been TREMENDOUSLY popular since the mid-to-late 00's and 2010, is now used in most of high school and university CS/Programming curriculums AND has been THE most popular programming language in the world in the last couple years overall. Most curriculums moved from Java to Python between 2010 and now, and it's clearly the #1 "learn to program" language in terms of popularity and power. While I have nothing against Delphi/OPascal myself (i have used delphi since the mid 1990s and think it's a great language/tool even today), I am still blown away that there are still entire countries out there that would use it as the defacto way to teach programming in high schools in 2022 (even if it was in 2010 i'd be amazed). Why teach using a language that is basically married to proprietary software (like delphi is to embarcadero's IDE or at the very least Lazarus, but laz is slightly diff than actual Delphi...) that students will almost NEVER use in the workforce (of course SOME companies use it....but it's the 0.01%)? Python is a thing.... Kotlin is a thing.... C is even still a (BIG) thing. So weird...
@intuit132 жыл бұрын
that said....I think it's pretty awesome that people are still making awesome tutorials for Delphi and Object Pascal (using Delphi or Lazarus IDE). And this IS a great tutorial series for it.
@dragon47mobile Жыл бұрын
I've started it in school and I love when we use pascal over delphi