On 2013-03-21 08:33, Michael Schnell wrote: > parameters to the IDE when designing the program ? Based on this, COM / > CORBA / ORB might be described as specializations of the concept.
I'm not sure I understand your question. COM is Component Object Model and DCOM is Distributed Component Object Model, developed by Microsoft. This only works on the Windows platform. That is how the do ActiveX, and how Delphi does multi-tier support with MIDAS (using DCOM). CORBA is Common Object Request Broker Architecture. A standard defined by the Object Management Group (OMG), and is a competing technology to DCOM. CORBA works on multiple platforms, and has a lot more functionality that DCOM. eg: CORBA can also be used instead of WebServices, has clearly defined interfaces and objects that are passed around between systems. You can then call methods on those objects - just like classes. This is just the tip of the iceberg of that CORBA can do. BTW: The Gnome desktop environment is built on top of CORBA too. JAVA uses CORBA extensively. ORB is Object Request Broker. You need this, through which a CORBA application will interact with other objects. Most ORB implementations are commercial, but there is a Delphi implemented version called mtdORB on SourceForge.net, and a few other implementations in other languages. In terms of Free Pascal and Interfaces support. COM style interfaces simply means they are _compatible_ with Microsoft COM, and are reference counted. CORBA style interfaces are _compatible_ with how interfaces are implemented in the CORBA standard, and there they are not reference counted. Simply using these two types of Interfaces in your applications don't make them dependant on Microsoft COM technology or CORBA technology. For more information on COM, DCOM, CORBA and XPCOM technologies, search WikiPedia. Regards, - Graeme - -- fpGUI Toolkit - a cross-platform GUI toolkit using Free Pascal http://fpgui.sourceforge.net/ -- _______________________________________________ Lazarus mailing list Lazarus@lists.lazarus.freepascal.org http://lists.lazarus.freepascal.org/mailman/listinfo/lazarus