September 13, 2004

Borland looks to take on Visual Studio with Diamondback

Upcoming tool is previewed

SAN JOSE, Calif. -- Borland Software with the planned Diamondback release of its Delphi tool for Windows applications is looking to take on Microsoft while accommodating .Net, Win32, and Delphi development, a Borland official said Monday at the BorCon conference here.  

With Diamondback Borland expects to compete with Microsoft's Visual Studio tool, said Michael Swindell, Borland director of product management for developer tools. He cited productivity improvements in touting the tool's strengths. "You'll be faster and more productive in Diamondback, that's what our goal is," Swindell said.

Diamondback is in limited beta release now; no general availability timeframe has been revealed yet by Borland. The product combines development on the Win32, Delphi, and .Net platforms, accommodating legacy Windows and new application development, according to Swindell.

"We have a lot of developers moving to .Net, but a lot of our developers are not completely there yet," Swindell said. "They still have a lot of life left in their Win32 applications."

Developers can add features and quality to existing applications while also moving to .Net, he said. By supporting ASP.Net, Diamondback enables developers to take advantage of Microsoft's managed code concepts for secure, manageable code, Swindell noted.

With Diamondback, users do not need separate development environments for C# and Delphi, Swindell said. "All of the team members can share the Delphi environment," he said.

A host of other improvements also await Diamondback users. "Our goal was to really make developers' daily lives easier, better, faster," Swindell said.

Code re-factoring enables users to make global, cascading changes to code. Developers, for example, can rename an object once and it is reflected throughout the source code. "Code re-factoring helps [developers] maintain their source code, whether it is writing their new applications or maintaining their existing code," said Swindell.

One conference attendee expressed curiosity about the time-saving possibilities of code re-factoring. "That's amazing, to be honest," said Johan Vorster, a software developer at Tower Systems International, a Melbourne, Australia developer of point-of-sale systems.

The code editor in Diamondback has been improved to flag errors on the fly. Code re-factoring will correct errors as well, Swindell said.

Additionally, Diamondback is fused with Borland's StarTeam project management system, with a StarTeam client embedded within the Diamondback IDE. "[Users will] be able to monitor and enter change requests," and compare different versions of code to reject or accept changes, Swindell said.

Unit testing in Diamondback enables creation of tests for developers to use on their code. "That's very useful [to] a developer, just for testing my own code, just for building better quality code. But it's also very useful for handing off [the code] to a formal testing environment," Swindell said.

Diamondback's history manager automates backups of developer files, so code is not lost.

ADO.Net, which is Microsoft's .Net framework for database connectivity, has been encapsulated within the rapid application development layer in Diamondback, enabling the use of different types of databases and easier building of multi-tier database applications, said Swindell. Also, data migration, for moving data between different databases, is built into Diamondback.

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