![turbo pascal 7.1 64 bit turbo pascal 7.1 64 bit](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/mOYpFW5AQcs/maxresdefault.jpg)
Python is fun, rewarding, easy to learn, easy to adapt, and has a rich library so that real world problems can be solved right way (you spend your time problem solving and less time in semantics). Pascal and BASIC were great back in the day, but in a modern world Python has them both beat hands down. There is plenty on-line to get you started, but I would also recommend Mark Summerfield's book Programing in Python 3. If you are new to Python, start with Python3. I run both in Mint ĭOSBox is better because it supports screen and sound (just like its the late 1980s all over again).Īnyway, TP runs great in these environments, and is a ton of fun (if you remember the day) however, having said that, the alternative I would recommend to anyone from the Pascal days (or the ubiquitous BASIC days) is Python. There are two very nice DOS emulators for gnu/linux. I still run TP3 in DOSBOX for really quick and dirty programs. (02-21-2015 08:44 PM)Bill (Smithville NJ) Wrote: I've been a Turbo Pascal fanatic from CP/M days to today.
![turbo pascal 7.1 64 bit turbo pascal 7.1 64 bit](https://demo.dokumen.tips/img/380x512/reader026/reader/2021100512/54890a43b47959357a8b45f1/r-1.jpg)
It is supported on many platforms in addition to Windows, has a command-line interface, a Free Pascal IDE that looks just like the old text-based Turbo Pascal IDE, or the more modern Lazarus IDE.
Turbo pascal 7.1 64 bit code#
The conversion required only compiler configuration and no changes to my old source code (except when 80386 inline assembly code was used). It even works with those that used VGA graphics.
Turbo pascal 7.1 64 bit windows 7#
Just a month ago I discovered Free Pascal and can now compile my 80+ old *.PAS programs on a 64-bit Windows 7 PC. When its 16-bit executable became obsolete on newer Windows PCs (such as when I switched from Windows XP to Windows 7) I continued using it within DOSBox. I've used Turbo Pascal 6.0 for quick programming projects since the early 1990s. Turbo Pascal has been mentioned in various posts here, so I thought the following would be worth mentioning.
![turbo pascal 7.1 64 bit turbo pascal 7.1 64 bit](https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-ATIHvxqTUAc/W7J_B6lA93I/AAAAAAAABDc/h69-C2jJZowSJ6gqyD-qtyRiIJ2uLuV0QCLcBGAs/s1600/turbo-pascal-1.5.jpg)
(02-12-2015 12:51 PM)Dieter Wrote: Unbelievable – that's exactly what I did in 1995! I also used Turbo Pascal 6.0. Your comment prompted me to resurrect my 1992 Turbo Pascal 6.0 program.