![]() ![]() Commit changes to distributed repositoryĪs mentioned before, it is advised that you pull incoming changes before you push outgoing changes to the distributed repository. This is an important step, because when you detect that someone has make changes to the program before you get to commit your latest changes, you are responsible to integrate their changes (merge) before pushing your version up to distributed repository. The guide does not cover the merging process the step to merge revision would be documented separately. Press the "Pull incoming changes from selected URL" button.Ģ. ![]() You will be prompted to enter your Bitbucket account password.ġ. Press the "Push outgoing changes from selected URL" button.Ģ. Once again, you will be prompted to enter your Bitbucket account password. This guide has covered the concept behind the distributed repository. Last post, I updated my development tool and installed new versions of my three 3rd party applications. Now it was time to get Behold working again in the new Delphi XE8 environment. Theoretically, if all updates made to an environment are backwards compatible, then old code would just run unchanged in the new environment. Then I compiled, and knowing that there was little likelihood of it working, I got: To get started, I included the 3rd party packages without my customizations to see if what was left would still run. One error was an incompatible type between Integer and TRVTag. This was a change I remember reading that RichView had made a few years ago to use strings instead of integers for their tags. The second was the error aborting the compile because it couldn’t compile the unit. For now, I just changed the declarations to eliminate the error and proceed. That doesn’t sound so bad for a first attempt, to have only 1 error. You fix one error and the compiler can then look at more code. Sure enough, after I fixed it, I now had:ĮurekaLog was now the culprit. The errors indicated major changes to that package, and indeed when I checked out their site, I found that Version 7 was almost completely rewritten. I wasn’t trying to get EurekaLog to do much. It was passing information from unexpected errors to a special form I had set up for that purpose. I looked to see what changed, and it wasn’t simple. I always give myself a couple of hours to see if I can figure out any problem. I go through their documentation and try various things. If stumped I might check StackOverflow and maybe ask a question there about how to do it. But I could not make any headway on this, so I went to the next step and submitted a support ticket on the EurekaLog site with my problem and requested a method to fix it. ![]() ![]() I got a response quickly, within a couple of hours (on a Saturday!) and that answer led me to some good examples, but they weren’t quite enough to help me. So I added to my ticket and while waiting went back to fix the rest of what wasn’t working. I commented out the offending EurekaLog statements and that allowed Behold to compile and run. It was nice to see Behold running from XE8. It ran fine, looked fine (except for a minor problem with the toolbar icons), and did not have any obvious problems. There were still lots of warnings and hints to fix. These included fixing declarations, replacing a deprecated symbol or routine with another, and new messages about possibly uninitialized variables that the XE8 compiler was picking up that 2009 didn’t. I worked my way through the most important compiler warnings and hints. Note: The Dialogue Foundation provides the HTML format of this article as a courtesy. Please note that there may be unintentional differences from the printed version. For citational and bibliographical purposes, please use the printed version, the PDF provided at the bottom of this page, or the PDF on JSTOR.Īlso, as of now, footnotes are not available for the online version. Over the years, the leadership of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has expressed a set of theories about the nature and purpose of music. McConkie asserted a divine origin of music: “Music is given of God to further his purposes.” Former Church President Heber J. Grant proclaimed the evangelical power of music when he said, “The singing of our sacred hymns, written by the servants of God, has a powerful effect in converting people to the principles of the Gospel, and in promoting peace and spiritual growth.” This is similar to former President Harold B. Lee’s belief that, “The most effective preaching of the gospel is when it is accompanied by beautiful, appropriate music.” While former President David O. ![]()
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