Record

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A record is a highly structured data type in Pascal. They are widely used in Pascal, to group data items together logically.

While simple data structures such as arrays or sets consist of elements all of the same type, a record can consist of a number of elements of different types, and can take on a huge complexity. Each separate part of a record is referred to as a field.

Declaration

fixed structure

type
	TMember = record
		firstname, surname : string;
		address: array [1..3] of string;
		phone: string;
		birthdate: TDateTime;
		paidCurrentSubscription: boolean
	end;

variable structure

And even more complex structures are possible, eg:

type
	maritalStates = (single, married, widowed, divorced);
	TPerson = record
		(* CONSTANT PART *)
		(* of course records may be nested *)
		name: record
			first, middle, last: string;
		end;
		sex: (male, female);
		(* date of birth *)
		dob: TDateTime;
		(* VARIABLE PART *)
		case maritalStatus: maritalStates of
			single: ( );
			married, widowed: (marriageDate: TDateTime);
			divorced: (marriageDate, divorceDate: TDateTime;
				isFirstDivorce: boolean)			
	end;

The fields of the variable part are only available after assignment of its depending variable. It doesn't harm, whether the field marriageDate ist defined multiple times.

Addressing

fields

Individual fields are accessed by placing a dot between the record name and the field name thus:

	a.firstname := 'George';
	a.surname := 'Petersen';
	a.phone := '789534';
	a.paidCurrentSubscription := true;

Alternatively, the whole series of fields can be made available together using the with-construct:

with a do
	begin
		firstname := 'George';
		surname := 'Petersen';
		phone := '789534';
		paidCurrentSubscription := true
	end;

instances

A record is treated by the program as a single entity, and for example a whole record can be copied (provided the copy is of the same type) thus:

var
	a, b: TMember;

(* main program *)
begin
	{ ... assign values to the fields in record a .. }
	b := a
	{ now b holds a copy of a }
	{ don't get confused with references: }
	{ a and b still point to different entities of TMember }
end.

See also

  • Records, tutorial that covers records


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simple data types

boolean byte cardinal char currency double dword extended int8 int16 int32 int64 integer longint real shortint single smallint pointer qword word

complex data types

array class object record set string shortstring