Kylix is the only Linux development tool that combines the world's fastest compiler with the most productive visual design environment for GUI, web and database programming.
Taking a short trip to Linuxland - find out what Kylix has to offer to a Delphi developer preparing to code cross-platform applications.
What is Kylix and what does it offer to a Delphi developer.
Shows the ease with which ApacheTM web server, web and Internet applications can be developed using Borland Kylix. This paper acts as an introduction to the capabilities of Kylix and Apache.
How to create and use Apache shared modules using Kylix. Apache is the web server used on Linux and shared modules are the Apache equivalent to ISAPI DLLs used with Windows Internet Information Server for high performance web applications.
Home Page for teh Kylix product.
[PDF] Examines the architecture of dbExpress and the provide/resolve mechanism. Subsequent sections describe the components that implement the Kylix data access strategy, and lead you through the steps of building a simple database application, demonstrating the power and productivity they provide.
Complete source for how to find files on your Linux system and display them in TTreeView/TListView pair with Kylix.
This whitepaper describes how to develop native cross-platform applications for Windows and Linux with Delphi, C++Builder, and Kylix.
This article explores file locking support on Linux (or, rather, the lack of it compared to Windows) and lots more.
Are you ready for Kylix? Of course you are! Is your system ready for Kylix? Here is a way to find out!
Installation builder for Kylix-specific Installs
This article is designed to get you up to speed on Kylix, the Linux operating system, and Linux culture.
This paper provides an overview and detailed description of migrating applications from Borland Delphi 5 for Windows to Kylix for Linux
Source code profiler for Kylix. ProKylix measures the runtime of methods, procedures or functions in CPU-cycles. It gives detailled results about the runtime of procedures as well as a quick overview about those procedures and classes, that consume the most runtime.
An example app is created to show what is happening internally in a Kylix application. The author shows how to create a minimal VisualCLX application and extend it using the low-level CLXDisplay API. There was no visual development here -- all controls were built at runtime, as in any traditional language.
This paper will look at the new CLX library that ships with all versions of Kylix and also with Delphi 6 and later. Delphi developers are familiar with the VCL, the Windows-only component library.
Here's how you can get Delphi's TDecompressionStream and TCompressionStream classes to work with Kylix.