Create and run TTimer in runtime

半城伤御伤魂 提交于 2020-05-12 04:57:09

问题


I'm trying to achieve in Delphi a behavior similar to Javascript's setTimeout() procedure : run things after a delay of some seconds. To do so, I'm creating a TTimer at runtime, running it, and then free it.

Here is my code:

procedure createAndRunTimer();
  procedure goTimer(Sender: TObject);
  begin
    (sender as ttimer).enabled := false;
    // do stuff here
    sender.free;
  end;
var
  t : TTimer;
begin
  t := TTimer.Create(frmprinc);
  t.Interval := 5000;
  t.OnTimer := goTimer(t);
end;

But my code won't compile, the compiler returns the error below:

[DCC Error] unit1.pas(2153): E2010 Incompatible types: 'TNotifyEvent' and 'procedure, untyped pointer or untyped parameter'"

Any hints?


回答1:


TNotifyEvent is declared as:

TNotifyEvent = procedure(Sender: TObject) of object;

The of object makes it a closure, which is a special type of method pointer that carries 2 pointers - an pointer to an object, and a pointer to a non-static class method which gets called on the object. As such, you cannot assign a standalone function, and certainly not a nested function, directly to a TNotifyEvent. That is what the compiler is complaining about.

So, you need to declare a class to wrap your OnTimer event handler, eg:

type
  TTimerEvents = class
  public
    procedure goTimer(Sender: TObject);
  end;

procedure TTimerEvents.goTimer(Sender: TObject);
begin
  (Sender as TTimer).Enabled := false;

  // do stuff here

  // NOTE: you cannot destroy the Sender object from here, you must delay
  // the destruction until after this handler exits!  You can post a
  // custom window message via PostMessage() and have the message handler
  // call Sender.Free().  Or, you can use a worker thread to call
  // Sender.Free() via TThread.Synchronize() (or TThread.Queue() in Delphi
  // 8 and later).  Or, in Delphi 10.2 Tokyo and later, you can call
  // Sender.Free() via TThread.ForceQueue().  Or, use whatever other
  // mechanism you want to use to call Sender.Free(), as long as it works
  // asynchronously and calls Sender.Free() in the same thread that
  // constructed the TTimer object ...
end;

var
  events: TTimerEvents;

procedure createAndRunTimer();
var
  t : TTimer;
begin
  t := TTimer.Create(frmprinc);
  t.Interval := 5000;
  t.OnTimer := events.goTimer;
  t.Enabled := True;
end;

initialization
  events := TTimerEvents.Create;
finalization
  events.Free;

Alternatively, you can use a class method so you don't need an actual instance of the wrapper class:

type
  TTimerEvents = class
  public
    class procedure goTimer(Sender: TObject);
  end;

class procedure TTimerEvents.goTimer(Sender: TObject);
begin
  (Sender as TTimer).Enabled := false;

  // do stuff here

  // delay-destroy the Sender as needed ...
end;

procedure createAndRunTimer();
var
  t : TTimer;
begin
  t := TTimer.Create(frmprinc);
  t.Interval := 5000;
  t.OnTimer := TTimerEvents.goTimer;
  t.Enabled := True;
end;

Or, in Delphi 2006 and later, you can use a class helper:

type
  TTimerHelper = class helper for TTimer
  public
    procedure goTimer(Sender: TObject);
  end;

procedure TTimerHelper.goTimer(Sender: TObject);
begin
  (Sender as TTimer).Enabled := false;

  // do stuff here

  // delay-destroy the Sender as needed ...
end;

procedure createAndRunTimer();
var
  t : TTimer;
begin
  t := TTimer.Create(frmprinc);
  t.Interval := 5000;
  t.OnTimer := t.goTimer;
  t.Enabled := True;
end;

That being said, there IS a way to use a standalone function without using any class wrapper at all:

procedure goTimer(Self: Pointer; Sender: TObject);
begin
  (Sender as TTimer).Enabled := false;

  // do stuff here

  // delay-destroy the Sender as needed ...
end;

procedure createAndRunTimer();
var
  t : TTimer;
  event : TNotifyEvent;
begin
  t := TTimer.Create(frmprinc);
  t.Interval := 5000;

  TMethod(event).Data := nil; // or whatever you want to pass to the Self parameter...
  TMethod(event).Code := @goTimer;
  t.OnTimer := event;

  t.Enabled := True;
end;



回答2:


I've used this procedure from Torry's as a delay, it doesn't lock the thread while executing:

procedure Delay(dwMilliseconds: Longint);
var
  iStart, iStop: DWORD;
begin
  iStart := GetTickCount;
  repeat
    iStop := GetTickCount;
    Application.ProcessMessages;
    Sleep(1);
  until (iStop - iStart) >= dwMilliseconds;
end;


来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49637129/create-and-run-ttimer-in-runtime

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