Turbo Pascal - Definition. Was ist Turbo Pascal
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Was (wer) ist Turbo Pascal - definition

PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE
Borland Pascal; Borland pascal; Turbopascal; Turbo pascal; Runtime error 200; TurboPascal; Turbo Pascal for Windows; Runtime Error 200; TURBO.EXE
  • Turbo Pascal 3.0 manual front cover

Turbo Pascal         
<language, product> Borland International's Pascal. Perhaps the first integrated development environment for MS-DOS. Versions 1.0-3.0: standard Pascal with a few extensions Versions 4.0 (1987) and 5.0: separate compilation. Version 5.5: object-oriented. Version 6.0: Turbo Vision OOP library. http://borland.com/Product/ProdInfo.html. tptc translates Turbo Pascal to Turbo C. (1995-05-01)
Pascal-SC         
ESPRIT DIAMOND Project. An extension of Pascal for numerical analysis, with controlled rounding, overloading, dynamic arrays and modules. "PASCAL-SC, A Computer Language for Scientific Computation", G. Bohlender et al, Academic Press 1987.
VSI Pascal         
VSI Pascal for OpenVMS (formerly HP Pascal for OpenVMS, Compaq Pascal, DEC Pascal, VAX Pascal and originally VAX-11 Pascal) is a Pascal compiler that runs on OpenVMS for VAX, AlphaServer, Integrity servers and x86-64 systems. It was also supported under Tru64.

Wikipedia

Turbo Pascal

Turbo Pascal is a software development system that includes a compiler and an integrated development environment (IDE) for the Pascal programming language running on CP/M, CP/M-86, and DOS. It was originally developed by Anders Hejlsberg at Borland, and was notable for its extremely fast compilation. Turbo Pascal, and the later but similar Turbo C, made Borland a leader in PC-based development.

For versions 6 and 7 (last), both a lower-priced Turbo Pascal and more expensive Borland Pascal were produced; Borland Pascal was more oriented toward professional software development, with more libraries and standard library source code. The name Borland Pascal is also used more generically for Borland's dialect of the Pascal programming language, significantly different from Standard Pascal.

Borland has released three old versions of Turbo Pascal free of charge because of their historical interest: the original Turbo Pascal (now known as 1.0), and versions 3.02 and 5.5 for DOS.