this post was submitted on 05 Dec 2023
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retrocomputing

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[–] [email protected] 3 points 11 months ago

This is the best summary I could come up with:


It is 40 years since Turbo Pascal revolutionized the coding marketplace with a slick (for the time) Integrated Development Environment (IDE) and performance to spare.

Turbo Pascal was released in 1983 and represented a shift from the traditional way programming tools worked in the early days of IBM PC compatibles.

Anders Hejlsberg, who would later go on to join Microsoft as part of the C# project, is widely credited as creator of the language, with Borland boss Philippe Kahn identifying the need for the all-in-one tool.

Object-oriented programming features turned up, including classes and inheritance, and a step-by-step debugger.

However, the steamroller of tools such as Visual Basic 3 ensured that Borland never had the same success in Windows that it enjoyed under DOS.

The language might have offended Pascal purists and the IDE seems a little clunky nowadays when compared to modern tools.


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