He recompiled the entire QuickReport source with this patch injected. The E2003 vanished. But then came the avalanche: E2010 Incompatible types: 'HPEN' and 'TFont' in QRExpImg.pas . The image exporter was trying to use GDI pens on GDI+ fonts. UPD’s updated TMetafile handling had stricter type checking.
The screen flickered. For one gut-wrenching second, the report preview was a scrambled mess of pixels and overlapping fonts. His heart sank. Then, as if waking from a coma, the TQRPreview component redrew itself. Line by line. Invoice number, date, item description, amount. Quickreport For Delphi 11 Alexandria UPD
At 1:15 AM, he wrote a dirty, beautiful hack. He created a new unit, QRCompatPatch.pas : He recompiled the entire QuickReport source with this
He ran the application. He clicked "Print Preview." The image exporter was trying to use GDI pens on GDI+ fonts
Marco exhaled. He saved the modified QuickReport source to a new folder: QuickReport_D11_UPD_Stable . He zipped it. He uploaded it to the company’s internal NuGet-style Delphi repository. He added a single comment in the team’s commit log: Patched QuickReport for Delphi 11 UPD. Replaced direct Canvas access with Win32 DC handle hack. Disabled GDI+ type checking in QRExpImg. Use {$DEFINE DELPHI11_UPD} in project settings. Works on my machine. Don't touch. He closed the IDE. The clock on the wall said 5:14 AM. He had just enough time for a double espresso before the client’s 8:00 AM validation call.
type TQRPrinterHack = class(TQRPrinter) private function GetCanvasHack: TCanvas; public property CanvasHack: TCanvas read GetCanvasHack; end;
The upgrade to "Alexandria UPD" (Update 2, to be precise) had seemed harmless. The release notes promised better high-DPI support and a more modernized VCL. What they didn't promise was that QReport’s ancient TQRPrinter component would suddenly decide that the default paper size was "User Defined," effectively rendering every invoice as a blank, 0x0 pixel void.