Lazarus (software)

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Lazarus is a cross-platform, integrated development environment (IDE) for rapid application development (RAD) using the Free Pascal compiler. Its goal is to provide an easy-to-use development environment for developing with the Object Pascal language, which is as close as possible to Delphi. It is free and open-source software with different parts released under different software licenses.

Lazarus
Developer(s)Lazarus and Free Pascal Team (volunteers)
Stable release
3.2.0 / February 28, 2024; 2 months ago (2024-02-28)
Repository
Written inObject Pascal
Operating systemcross-platform: Windows, macOS, Linux[1]
PlatformIA-32, x86-64, ARM (Raspberry Pi)[1]
Available in14 languages
List of languages
Chinese (simplified), Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Polish, Portuguese (Brazilian), Russian, Spanish, Ukrainian
TypeIntegrated development environment
LicenseGNU General Public License and modified GNU Lesser General Public License (with static linking exception)
Websitewww.lazarus-ide.org

Lazarus is often used to create native-code console and graphical user interface (GUI) applications for desktop computers, mobile devices, web applications, web services, visual components, and function libraries for several different operating system platforms, including macOS, Linux, and Windows.[1]

A project created by using Lazarus on one platform can be compiled on any other one which Free Pascal compiler supports. For desktop applications, one source code can target macOS, Linux, and Windows, with little or no modification. For example, the Lazarus IDE is created from one code base and available on all major platforms including Raspberry Pi.

Features

Lazarus provides a What You See Is What You Get (WYSIWYG) development environment for creating rich user interfaces, application logic, and other supporting code artifacts, similar to Delphi. Along with project management features, the Lazarus IDE also provides:

  • A visual windows layout designer
  • GUI widgets or visual components such as edit boxes, buttons, dialogs, menus, etc.
  • Non-visual components for common behaviors such as persistence of application settings
  • Data-connectivity components for MySQL, PostgreSQL, FireBird, Oracle, SQLite, Sybase, and others
  • Data-aware widget set that allows the developer to see data in visual components in the designer to assist with development
  • Interactive debugger
  • Code completion
  • Code templates
  • Syntax highlighting
  • Context-sensitive help
  • Text resource manager for internationalization
  • Automatic code formatting
  • Extensibility via custom components

Cross-platform development

Architecture of the Lazarus Component Library
Interaction of class libraries and widgetsets in Lazarus and Free Pascal

Lazarus uses Free Pascal as its back-end compiler. As Free Pascal supports cross-compiling, Lazarus applications can be cross-compiled from Windows, Linux, or macOS to any of the supported Free Pascal compilation targets. Applications for embedded devices (smartphones, PDAs, routers, game consoles) can be cross-compiled from any desktop platform.

Lazarus provides a cross-platform application framework called the Lazarus Component Library (LCL), which provides a single, unified interface for programmers, with different platform-specific implementations. Using LCL, it is possible to create applications in a write once, compile anywhere manner, unless system-dependent features are used explicitly. LCL was originally modeled after the Visual Component Library (VCL) in Delphi 6, but is not restricted to Windows. This is done by separating the definition of common widget classes and their widgetset-specific implementation. Each widget set is supported by providing an interface which interacts directly with the set.[2]

Database development

Developers can install packages that allow Lazarus to support several database management systems (DBMSes). Programs can interact with a DBMS through code or by components dropped on a form.

The following DBMSes are supported out of the box:

Differences from Delphi

Lazarus resembles Delphi in many ways. It supports Component Object Model (COM) since version 2.2.0, and offers most of Delphi's networking functions. However, there are limits to the performance and feature set.

Lazarus does not support the following, which Delphi does:

  • Datasnap (uses Embarcadero proprietary enterprise functions, not a publicly documented system)
  • Dynamically loadable packages
  • .NET libraries (.NET code, however, can invoke Object Pascal code or anything other machine-native library via Platform Invocation Services.[4])
  • Extensive Microsoft Office connectivity (Lazarus can only open Microsoft Excel with a simple table filled out.)[citation needed]

LCL is not fully compatible with VCL. This makes the extensive repository of available VCL widgets inaccessible without conversion. The conversion effort mostly involves some editing, although there are a few fundamental differences. When porting, missing units in the libraries are a considerably bigger problem than incompatibilities between LCL and VCL. Components for Delphi can be converted to work in Lazarus. This can be complex, though less so than for Lazarus versions older than 0.9.30, based on FP 2.4.x.

On Windows, the default size of an executable file is larger than the Delphi 6 or 7 equivalent, as Lazarus stores debug information within the executable, rather than as separate files. Starting with version 0.9.30, Lazarus supports external debug symbols via compiler options. Thus, program file sizes can be significantly reduced. Alternatively, debug info can be stripped from EXEs (e.g. using a port of the UNIX strip command).

Distribution and licensing

Like Free Pascal, Lazarus is free software. Different portions are distributed under different free software licenses, including GPL, LGPL, MPL, and a modified version of LGPL.[5] LCL, which is statically built into the produced executables, is licensed under a modified version of the LGPL, granting extra permissions to allow it to be statically built into the produced software, including proprietary ones.

Installing a design time package is equivalent to linking to the IDE, so that distributing the Lazarus IDE with a GPL-incompatible design-time package such as the JEDI packages licensed under the Mozilla Public License, pre-installed would cause a license violation. This does not prohibit proprietary packages from being developed with Lazarus.

History

The first attempt to develop an IDE for Free Pascal dates back to 1998, under the "Megido" project. After the project failed, some of its developers started a new project based on a more flexible foundation. The name "Lazarus" alludes to the revival of the Megido concept. It is inspired by Lazarus of Bethany, who, according to the Gospel of John, was restored to life by Jesus four days after his death.

The first preliminary LCL version was ready for release in 2001. In 2003, the first beta version of Lazarus (0.9.0.3) was hosted at SourceForge. Lazarus version 1.0 was released in 2012. A significantly enhanced Lazarus 1.2 with was released in 2014. More than four million downloads had been made from SourceForge as of March 2014.

Versions

Legend:
Old version
Older version, still maintained
Latest version
Latest preview version
Future release
Version numberRelease datePlatformComments
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.0.5January 2001WindowsFirst release of component library
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.1January 2001WindowsRedesign of component library to support platform-sensitive development for Linux and Windows using GTK+ and other widgetsets
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.5January 30, 2001Windows, LinuxBug fixes and new features supporting cross-platform development and project skeletons
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.8October 9, 2001Windows, LinuxCodetools implemented, bug fixes
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.8.2January 17, 2002Windows, LinuxExpanded find functions
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.8.4August 19, 2002Windows, LinuxImproved graphics and font support, support for Delphi 6 syntax. Binary DFMs are now automatically converted to LFMs
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.8.5October 26, 2002Windows, LinuxLCL decoupled from interfaces
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.0.3September 4, 2003LinuxFirst release on SourceForge
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.1February 27, 2004Windows, LinuxSupport for packages, numerous added and enhanced properties
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.4January 3, 2005WindowsThreading support improved, oldest public version hosted at SourceForge
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.6February 25, 2005Windows
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.8July 19, 2005Windows
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.10October 3, 2005Windows, Mac OS X (PPC)Bug fixes, extensibility of IDE improved, document editor for FPDoc files; includes Free Pascal 2.0.1
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.12February 7, 2006WindowsNew packages for database support, CGI applications and printing
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.14April 2, 2006Windows, Mac OS X (PPC), LinuxBugfixes, more controls in WinCE and Qt4 interface
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.16May 28, 2006Windows, Mac OS X (PPC), LinuxBug fixes, online help for IDE windows and for LCL applications, improvements to Qt widgetset interface; includes Free Pascal 2.0.2
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.18September 23, 2006Windows, Mac OS X (PPC), LinuxBugfixes, procedure list implemented, new command-line tool "lazbuild"
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.20November 5, 2006Windows, Mac OS X (PPC), LinuxBufixes, code folding implemented, Qt widgetset improved
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.22March 26, 2007Windows, Mac OS X (PPC), LinuxNew components to write Windows services and Linux daemons, support for custom mouse cursors; includes Free Pascal 2.0.4
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.24November 15, 2007Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxFirst stable release for Win64, WinCE, and Intel-based Mac OS X. Improvements in Qt, Carbon, and Gtk2 widgetset interfaces. Customizable toolbar; includes Free Pascal 2.2.0
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.26October 5, 2008Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxInternal graphic system was rewritten. LCL now uses Unicode strings encoded as UTF-8 on all platforms. FPDoc help in tooltips. First version to run natively using the Carbon widgetset on Mac OS X
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.26.2March 13, 2009Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxBug fixes, improved icon support; includes Free Pascal 2.2.2
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.28September 29, 2009Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxImprovements of editor and debugger including support for double-byte fonts such as Eastern, Japanese, Chinese, and Arabic, smaller file sizes of generated applications; includes Free Pascal 2.2.4
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.28.2October 25, 2009Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxMainly bug fixes
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.30March 22, 2011Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxLarge number of new features, including docking and multiple source-code windows. Based on Free Pascal 2.4.2
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.30.2RC1September 30, 2011Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxIncludes Free Pascal 2.4.4. Release candidate for Lazarus 0.9.30.2
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.30.2RC2October 26, 2011Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxRelease candidate for Lazarus 0.9.30.2
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.30.2November 5, 2011Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxBug fixes
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.30.4RC1March 3, 2012Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxBug fixes, includes Free Pascal 2.6.0. Release candidate for Lazarus 0.9.30.4
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.30.4RC2March 7, 2012Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxRelease candidate for Lazarus 0.9.30.4
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.30.4RC3March 11, 2012Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxRelease candidate for Lazarus 0.9.30.4
Old version, no longer maintained: 0.9.30.4March 14, 2012Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxBug fixes
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.0RC1July 29, 2012Windows, Mac OS X (Intel), LinuxRelease candidate for Lazarus 1.0
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.0RC2August 21, 2012Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxRelease candidate for Lazarus 1.0
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.0August 28, 2012Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxFirst final version. This stable release includes Free Pascal 2.6.0. Multiple corrections and improvements of the IDE, including a macro function, expanded code-folding and new debugger functions
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.0.2October 10, 2012Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxBug fixes, minor additions to LCL and widgetsets
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.0.4December 2, 2012Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxBug fixes, minor additions to IDE, LCL and widgetsets as well as LazReport and TAChart
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.0.6February 3, 2013Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxBug fixes, minor additions to IDE, LCL and widgetsets as well as LazReport and TAChart
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.0.8March 19, 2013Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxBug fix release; includes Free Pascal 2.6.2
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.0.10June 12, 2013Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxBug fixes
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.0.12August 24, 2013Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxBug fixes
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.0.14November 16, 2013Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxBug fixes
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.1.99September 16, 2013Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxAlpha version for Lazarus 1.2
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.2RC1November 3, 2013Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxRelease candidate for Lazarus 1.2
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.2RC2January 13, 2014Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxRelease candidate for Lazarus 1.2
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.2March 4, 2014Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxMultiple new features, including a macro recorder, support for layered graphs and Pascal Script. Based on Free Pascal 2.6.2
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.2.2April 23, 2014Windows, Mac OS X, BSD, Solaris, LinuxBug fix release. Based on Free Pascal 2.6.4
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.2.4June 16, 2014Windows, Mac OS X, BSD, Solaris, LinuxBug fix release
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.2.6October 12, 2014Windows, Mac OS X, BSD, Solaris, LinuxBug fix release
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.4.0April 19, 2015Windows, Mac OS X, BSD, Solaris, LinuxImprovements of editor, resource handling and additional new features. Based on Free Pascal 2.6.4
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.4.2July 14, 2015Windows, Mac OS X, BSD, Solaris, LinuxBug fix release
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.4.4October 4, 2015Windows, Mac OS X, BSD, Solaris, LinuxBug fix release
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.6February 18, 2016Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxMultiple new features, including docking, project groups and improved editor. Based on Free Pascal 3.0.0.[6]
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.6.2November 13, 2016Windows, Mac OS X, LinuxBug fix release
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.6.4February 26, 2017Windows, macOS, LinuxBug fix release. Based on Free Pascal 3.0.2
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.8.0December 6, 2017Windows, macOS, BSD, LinuxMajor release with many new features including an online package manager. Based on Free Pascal 3.0.4
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.8.2February 28, 2018.Bug fix release
Old version, no longer maintained: 1.8.4May 22, 2018Windows, macOS, BSD, LinuxBug fix release.[7]
Older version, yet still maintained: 2.0.0January 5, 2019Windows, macOS, BSD, LinuxMultiple new features including Cocoa support and the introduction of a Pascal to JavaScript transpiler
Older version, yet still maintained: 2.0.2April 16, 2019Windows, macOS, BSD, LinuxBug fix release
Older version, yet still maintained: 2.0.4August 6, 2019Windows, macOS, BSD, LinuxBug fix release
Older version, yet still maintained: 2.0.6November 1, 2019Windows, macOS, BSD, LinuxBug fix release
Older version, yet still maintained: 2.0.8April 16, 2020Windows, macOS, BSD, LinuxBug fix release, improved Cocoa widgetset
Older version, yet still maintained: 2.0.10July 11, 2020Windows, macOS, BSD, LinuxBug fix release, minor additions, first version based on Free Pascal 3.2.0
Older version, yet still maintained: 2.0.12February 21, 2021Windows, macOS, BSD, LinuxBased on Free Pascal 3.2.0. List of fixes available.[8]
Older version, yet still maintained: 2.2.0January 5, 2022Windows, macOS, BSD, LinuxBased on Free Pascal 3.2.2. Multiple improvements, among others in the IDE, the LCL and widgetsets.[9]
Older version, yet still maintained: 2.2.2May 19, 2022Windows, macOS, BSD, LinuxBug fix release
Older version, yet still maintained: 2.2.4September 28, 2022Windows, macOS, BSD, LinuxBug fix release
Older version, yet still maintained: 2.2.6March 6, 2023Windows, macOS, BSD, LinuxBug fix release
Current stable version: 3.0December 21, 2023Windows, macOS, BSD, LinuxMultiple improvements, among others in the IDE, the LCL, widgetsets and the debugger.[10]

Examples of applications produced with Lazarus

  • ASuite is a free open-source application launcher for Windows. From 2.1 Alpha 1, it's fully written in Lazarus/FPC.
  • Beyond Compare is a data comparison utility for Windows, macOS, and Linux. The macOS and Linux versions are compiled using Lazarus/FPC.
  • Cartes du Ciel is a free planetarium program for Linux, macOS and Windows. The software maps out and labels most of the constellations, planets, and objects you can see with a telescope. It is fully written in Lazarus/FPC and released under GPL.
  • C-evo is an open source turn-based strategy game that has been ported from Delphi to Lazarus.[11]
  • Cheat Engine is an open-source memory scanner/hex editor/debugger. It is useful for cheating in computer games. Since version 6.0 it is compiled with Lazarus/FPC.
  • EPANET, a software package for modelling water-distribution systems.
  • HNSKY, Hallo Northern Sky is a free planetarium program for Windows and Linux. Since version 3.4.0 written and compiled with Lazarus/FPC.
  • MyNotex is a free software for Linux useful to take and manage textual notes.
  • PeaZip is an open-source archiver, made with Lazarus/FPC.
  • TorChat is moving away from Python and is being rewritten in Lazarus + Free Pascal.
  • Total Commander 64-bit version.[12]
  • Double Commander is a cross-platform open-source file manager with two panels side by side. It is inspired by Total Commander, plus some new ideas.[13]
  • SimThyr is a continuous simulation program for thyroid homeostasis.

Examples of Delphi libraries compatible with Lazarus

See also

References

Further reading

  • van Canneyt, Michaël; Klämpfl, Florian (2012). Free Pascal (2nd ed.). Computer & Literatur Verlag GmbH. ISBN 978-3936546729. OL 25421359M. 393654672X.
  • van Canneyt, Michaël; Gärtner, Mattias; Heinig, Swen; de Carvalho, Felipe Monteiro; Ouedraogo, Inoussa; Braun, Jörg (2011). Lazarus. Böblingen, Germany: Computer & Literatur Verlag GmbH. OL 25426539M.
  • van Canneyt, Michaël; Gärtner, Mattias; Heinig, Swen; de Carvalho, Felipe Monteiro; Ouedraogo, Inoussa (2011). Lazarus: the complete guide. Blaise Pascal Magazine. OL 25427992M.
  • Koch, Wilfried (2020). Professional Programming from the Beginning with Free Pascal and the Free Development Environment Lazarus (Part 1). Oberkochen, Germany: Oberkochener Medienverlag. p. 442. ISBN 9783945899311.
  • Koch, Wilfried (2022). Professional Programming from the Beginning with Free Pascal and the Free Development Environment Lazarus (Part 2). Oberkochen, Germany: Oberkochener Medienverlag. p. 438. ISBN 9783945899267.

External links