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Encyclopedia > Borland Pascal

Turbo Pascal, also known as Borland Pascal, is a cheap and powerful IDE for the DOS environment. It uses Pascal and from version 5 onwards Object Pascal as its main programming language. The compiler component of Turbo Pascal was based on the Blue Label Pascal compiler originally produced for the NasSys cassette-based operating system of the Nascom microcomputer in 1981 by Anders Hejlsberg. This was first rewritten as the Compass Pascal compiler for the CP/M operating system and then as the Turbo Pascal compiler for DOS and CP/M. A version of Turbo Pascal was available for the Apple Macintosh from about 1986 but was eventually discontinued around 1992.


When the first version of Turbo Pascal appeared in 1983, the type of IDE which it used was relatively new. On its debut in the American market, Turbo Pascal retailed for $49.99 US. The integrated Pascal compiler also was of very good quality compared to other Pascal products and was affordable above all. The "Turbo" name alluded to its compilation speed.


In the early 1990s, it was used in several universities to teach the fundamental concepts of programming.


It is likely that Microsoft Pascal was dropped because of the competition provided by Turbo Pascal's good quality and low price. Another theory is that Borland made an agreement with Microsoft to drop development of Turbo BASIC, a BASIC IDE that stems from Turbo Pascal, if Microsoft would stop developing Microsoft Pascal.


Over the years Borland enhanced not only the IDE but also the programming language, since version 5.5 it contained object oriented programming features. The last version of Turbo Pascal was called Borland Pascal 7 and contained an IDE and compilers for creating DOS, extended DOS and Windows 3.x programs.


By 1995, Borland had dropped Turbo Pascal and replaced it with the RAD environment Delphi, which included the language Object Pascal. Native 32_bit Delphi versions still support the more portable Pascal enhancements (read: that are not 16_bit centric) of the earlier products including the earlier static object model.


External links

  • Borland Developer Network Museum (http://community.borland.com/museum/)
  • Antique Software: Turbo Pascal version 5.5 (http://community.borland.com/article/0,1410,20803,00.html)
  • comp.lang.pascal.borland FAQ (http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/clpb_faq.txt)
  • Turbo Pascal Programmers Page (http://www.devq.net/pascal/)









  Results from FactBites:
 
Borland: Open ALM for Application Development (342 words)
Borland’s leadership team and talented group of consultants have consistently demonstrated their commitment to working with us to accomplish our goals.”
Borland is the leading vendor of Open Application Lifecycle Management (ALM) solutions – open to customers’ processes, tools and platforms – providing the flexibility to manage, measure and improve the software delivery process.
Borland’s product suite spans the application development lifecycle: IT project and portfolio management, requirements definition and management, UML modeling, software test management, continuous integration and code coverage, functional testing, performance testing, component and unit testing, and software change and configuration management.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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