We've just released a patch for RAD Studio 10.3.3 which resolves the following issue:
An issue that prevented an Android service running because it could not load its native library. This only affected applications packaged as Android App Bundles. The base APK generated from an AAB has the extractNativeLibs manifest attribute set to false. In this case, the Package Manager does not extract the library to the filesystem when installing the application, causing the Android service to pass the dynamic linker an incorrect absolute path to the native library.
It intelligently runs automated tests so that you don't have to, and gives you a huge amount of useful information about your tested code, such as code coverage and performance metrics, inline in your IDE while you type.
This patch resolves an issue with the EMS RAD Server package wizard automatically adding the Linux target platform to both Delphi and C++Builder projects when not installed or not supported (C++Builder), causing the IDE to crash when using the wizard.
It intelligently runs automated tests so that you don't have to, and gives you a huge amount of useful information about your tested code, such as code coverage and performance metrics, inline in your IDE while you type.
It intelligently runs automated tests so that you don't have to, and gives you a huge amount of useful information about your tested code, such as code coverage and performance metrics, inline in your IDE while you type.
It intelligently runs automated tests so that you don't have to, and gives you a huge amount of useful information about your tested code, such as code coverage and performance metrics, inline in your IDE while you type.
dotMemory is a .NET memory profiler that helps you optimize memory usage in your application, find memory leaks, and fight other types of memory issues. To ease your task, dotMemory automatically scans your snapshot for most common types of memory issues. These inspections can be a great starting point in analyzing a snapshot if you're not sure where to begin.
MIKE Zero is the common name of DHI's fully Windows integrated graphical user interface for setting up simulations, pre- and post-processing analysis, presentation and visualisation within a project oriented environment. Presently, the MIKE Zero framework gives access to the following DHI modelling systems: