Turbo Vision - significado y definición. Qué es Turbo Vision
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Qué (quién) es Turbo Vision - definición


Turbo (finance)         
FINANCIAL DERIVATIVE
Rolling turbos; Rolling turbo; Turbo (financial instument)
A turbo is a leveraged financial derivative first introduced by Goldman Sachs in 2004. They are tradable by institutional and private investors and have characteristics similar to contracts for difference and covered warrants.
Turbo laminiferus         
SPECIES OF MOLLUSC
Turbo (Marmarostoma) squamosus; Turbo squamosus; Turbo lamniferus; Crinkly turban
Turbo laminiferus, common name the crinkly turban, is a species of sea snail, marine gastropod mollusk in the family Turbinidae.
Turbo tursicus         
SPECIES OF MOLLUSC
Turbo somnueki
Turbo tursicus is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Turbinidae, the turban snails.

Wikipedia

Turbo Vision

Turbo Vision is a character-mode text user interface framework included with Borland Pascal, Turbo Pascal, and Borland C++ circa 1990. It was used by Borland itself to write the integrated development environments (IDE) for these programming languages. By default, Turbo Vision applications replicate the look and feel of these IDEs, including edit controls, list boxes, check boxes, radio buttons and menus, all of which have built-in mouse support. Later it was deprecated in favor of Object Windows Library, the Win16 API, and the GUI tools of Borland Delphi.

Around 1997, the C++ version, including source code, was released by Borland into the public domain and is currently being ported and developed by an open-source community on SourceForge under the GPL license. An older update of the Borland code by Sergio Sigala is available under the BSD license.

The Pascal version, which was distributed alongside Borland Pascal 7 on a "bonus" disk, was never released under a free software license, so the Free Pascal project recreated its own version by backporting a clone made by Leon de Boer that ran in graphical mode back to textmode. The result is called Free Vision. Over the years this codebase has grown stable on nearly all operating systems and architectures that FPC supports. The textmode IDE is very close to the original TP environment, with built-in compiler and IDE much closer than e.g. RHIDE, and supporting functionality like code folding.