frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

fp.

Open in hackernews

Delphi is 31 years old – innovation timeline

https://blogs.embarcadero.com/delphi-innovation-timeline-31st-anniversary-edition-published-get-your-free-pdf/
56•andsoitis•5d ago

Comments

nullable_bool•1h ago
When I was a kid, my older brother worked for Borland. He got me 2 packs of stickers that said "Delphi developers do it better!!!" in red font and a yellow background.
Nexxxeh•1h ago
When I was starting out as a kid learning to make applications, moving from VB6 to Delphi was such a huge improvement.

Tempted to use a client's plotter and roll of paper to print this off.

sllabres•1h ago
Sometimes I miss the times where you had a compact development environment, wit one installer. Your source produced a mostly self contained binary in a reasonable size, you had nice debugging support and quick turnaround times for a compiled language even on a small development machines. And all that for attractive price for a perpetual license (Borland times).

Today it seems I have to give the producer my email address for the 'free' "Delphi History PDF". Well, times have changed. :)

themafia•1h ago
npm i nostalgia
avrionov•24m ago
For me Go and Rust match this to a point. Especially Go once installed it generates executable extremely fast.
carlos256•1h ago
31 years old and it can't run on GNU/Linux. What a waste. The future of Delphi is darker than ever.
oblio•1h ago
Weird but FreePascal is fairly solid for its niche.
kogus•1h ago
I have very fond memories of working with Delphi 5 and 2005 in the early 2000s. Both the language and IDE were a real pleasure to work with, and they were head and shoulders better than anything from Microsoft at that time. The community was small but enthusiastic and supportive as well.

It would be hard to justify Delphi in a new project today - not because of the tooling or language, but because of the prohibitive license costs.

zerr•50m ago
Same here, but with C++Builder.
t1234s•58m ago
The original borland delphi had very creative installer graphics:

https://www.gladir.com/SOFTWARE/DELPHI1/delphi1-install5.png

alterom•54m ago
That was before Delphi 2.0 even :)
esafak•53m ago
The programmers must have been playing https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Test_Drive_(1987_video_game)
oytis•56m ago
What is dead may never die
rawgabbit•52m ago
I remember taking an onsite class to learn Delphi. The class was taught in St Petersburg Florida. Nice place. At the time, I was admiring the tool that Borland created and thought to myself this is a very nice IDE. Too bad my company was switching to all things .Net. The difference between Visual Studio and the Delphi IDE was gut wrenching.
davtyan1202•48m ago
The hardest part of maintaining a long-term project is resisting the urge to over-engineer early on. Striking a balance between a lean core and future extensibility is an art form that often gets ignored in favor of shipping fast.
boznz•43m ago
Happy birthday Delphi, you made me a lot of money :-)

I am guessing most Delphi developers like me, have either retired or have moved to Linux. I have done both recently and I unfortunately do not see a new generation following in behind me. I hope it survives as it was and still is a nice IDE and language to work in, though I'm guessing newer Pascal developers will opt for Lazarus

bogota69•41m ago
Straight up, nobody uses it anymore.
OldSchool•25m ago
The way I saw it in 1995 was that Delphi was the fastest way to create a full windows desktop app and do it as single compiled-to-native-code executable at that critical time it was released. The slightly-later 32-bit version was powerful and gave your app some staying power; a Delphi-generated executable file would likely still run today.
smackeyacky•22m ago
Sadly they still do, although finding somebody to work on them is hard and while the executables work, the dev environment does not. Delphi was a pretty nasty dead end
piskov•19m ago
Is it still alive? Last time I used it was around 2005.

One nice thing though as I remember was that ruins of Russian Borland branch gave us Jetbrains.

zac23or•19m ago
I started using Delphi 3 and stopped at 7, migrating to web development (Rails, Django, etc.).

Delphi was magical. Nothing compares to Delphi's productivity. Rails is good, but it doesn't even come close to Delphi's productivity. People love Go's speed. Go is glacially slow compared to Delphi. The WYSIWYG form editor is incredible. I can use Delphi 3 on a Windows machine with 16 MB of RAM.

VCL is fantastic; the idea of components and memory management is incredible, simple, and it works.

Delphi is my first language; I studied VCL code and I love the code, the style. They were practical: Instead of Hash, they used TStrings (a list of strings) and the visual components also used them, like in the items of a Listbox!

Delphi could have been the platform for the web. Imagine a VCL for the web (VCLW), where you could change the target architecture or something like that and, presto, you'd have a web server running with VCL code!

That never happened. What happened was a series of bad ideas for the web, bad in their essence.

And Delphi invested in many projects doomed to failure, such as CORBA, three-tier architecture, MDA... Kylix!!!! Of course, Borland was very poorly managed. The CEOs were crazy. "Let's fight IBM." Delphi was abandoned. It's over.

I tried a new version of Delphi a few years ago. Wow, it was full of bugs! It had basic problems like compilation not working, Random crashing several times, etc. For me the new versions are just a way to profit from projects stuck in Delphi.

I tried Lazarus in the past, but it's extremely slow and I can't use my components in Lazarus without rewriting a lot of things.

To me, Delphi is languishing in an induced coma, breathing the air of the past, which is becoming increasingly rare. It's a shame.

Aloha•13m ago
This so much.

We just got code complete on porting a 30 year old Delphi app to C#, because of all of this.

Even now, our pure Delphi components are performant and wonderful, but hiring people who want to learn or know Delphi is hard, so off to C# we trundle forward.

chrisatthestudy•2m ago
I'm now retired, but I spent much (most?) of my career developing with Delphi. When I began, it was the new hotness. When I finished, I was supporting legacy applications that were decades old. Good to see it's still around, though.

Cosmologically Unique IDs

https://jasonfantl.com/posts/Universal-Unique-IDs/
220•jfantl•3h ago•57 comments

Womens Sizing

https://pudding.cool/2026/02/womens-sizing/
67•zdw•1h ago•19 comments

Tailscale Peer Relays is now generally available

https://tailscale.com/blog/peer-relays-ga
272•sz4kerto•5h ago•132 comments

Zero-day CSS: CVE-2026-2441 exists in the wild

https://chromereleases.googleblog.com/2026/02/stable-channel-update-for-desktop_13.html
208•idoxer•5h ago•108 comments

DNS-Persist-01: A New Model for DNS-Based Challenge Validation

https://letsencrypt.org/2026/02/18/dns-persist-01.html
129•todsacerdoti•4h ago•57 comments

R3forth: A concatenative language derived from ColorForth

https://github.com/phreda4/r3/blob/main/doc/r3forth_tutorial.md
34•tosh•2h ago•3 comments

Show HN: Rebrain.gg – Doom learn, don't doom scroll

15•FailMore•10h ago•4 comments

The Perils of ISBN

https://rygoldstein.com/posts/perils-of-isbn
38•evakhoury•4h ago•10 comments

Metriport (YC S22) is hiring a security engineer to harden healthcare infra

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/metriport/jobs/XC2AF8s-senior-security-engineer
1•dgoncharov•1h ago

If you’re an LLM, please read this

https://annas-archive.li/blog/llms-txt.html
699•soheilpro•15h ago•327 comments

What is happening to writing? Cognitive debt, Claude Code, the space around AI

https://resobscura.substack.com/p/what-is-happening-to-writing
55•benbreen•7h ago•26 comments

Pocketbase lost its funding from FLOSS fund

https://github.com/pocketbase/pocketbase/discussions/7287
97•Onavo•6h ago•59 comments

Learning Lean: Part 1

https://rkirov.github.io/posts/lean1/
57•vinhnx•3d ago•6 comments

27-year-old Apple iBooks can connect to Wi-Fi and download official updates

https://old.reddit.com/r/MacOS/comments/1r8900z/macos_which_officially_supports_27_year_old/
14•surprisetalk•1h ago•3 comments

Portugal: The First Global Empire (2015)

https://www.historytoday.com/archive/first-global-empire
35•Thevet•14h ago•24 comments

A solver for Semantle

https://victoriaritvo.com/blog/semantle-solver/
21•evakhoury•3h ago•3 comments

What Every Experimenter Must Know About Randomization

https://spawn-queue.acm.org/doi/pdf/10.1145/3778029
23•underscoreF•3h ago•8 comments

Discrete Structures [pdf]

https://kyleormsby.github.io/files/113spring26/113full_text.pdf
30•mathgenius•3h ago•2 comments

Delphi is 31 years old – innovation timeline

https://blogs.embarcadero.com/delphi-innovation-timeline-31st-anniversary-edition-published-get-y...
56•andsoitis•5d ago•23 comments

Cistercian Numbers

https://www.omniglot.com/language/numbers/cistercian-numbers.htm
50•debo_•5h ago•8 comments

Show HN: VectorNest responsive web-based SVG editor

https://ekrsulov.github.io/vectornest/
60•ekrsulov•6h ago•22 comments

Assigning Open Problems in Class

https://blog.computationalcomplexity.org/2026/02/assigning-open-problems-in-class.html
6•baruchel•2d ago•2 comments

The true history of the Minotaur: what archaeology reveals

https://www.nationalgeographic.fr/histoire/la-veritable-histoire-du-minotaure-ce-que-revele-arche...
27•joebig•3d ago•11 comments

Show HN: Formally verified FPGA watchdog for AM broadcast in unmanned tunnels

https://github.com/Park07/amradio
52•anonymoosestdnt•7h ago•17 comments

Show HN: CEL by Example

https://celbyexample.com/
64•bufbuild•8h ago•32 comments

SkyRL brings Tinker to your GPUs (2025)

https://novasky-ai.notion.site/skyrl-tinker
22•robertnishihara•5d ago•1 comments

There is unequivocal evidence that Earth is warming (2024)

https://science.nasa.gov/climate-change/evidence/
128•doener•2h ago•111 comments

Garment Notation Language: Formal descriptive language for clothing construction

https://github.com/khalildh/garment-notation
122•prathyvsh•6h ago•35 comments

Native FreeBSD Kerberos/LDAP with FreeIPA/IDM

https://vermaden.wordpress.com/2026/02/18/native-freebsd-kerberos-ldap-with-freeipa-idm/
103•vermaden•11h ago•50 comments

Fastest Front End Tooling for Humans and AI

https://cpojer.net/posts/fastest-frontend-tooling
93•cpojer•10h ago•53 comments