Let's take a quick look at how software was built in the MS-DOS era: Borland Pascal 7.
Let's take a quick look at how software was built in the MS-DOS era: Borland Pascal 7.
Since we explored quite a few older MS-DOS applications so far, including text-mode file managers, editors, archiving tools and even design…
If I remember correctly, Objects were introduced in Turbo Pascal 5.5, not version 7.
8 0 ReplyPermanently Deleted
6 0 ReplyQBASIC fucked me up for a while.
2 0 ReplyThere were quite a few Delphi applications back in the day, they were easily recognisable by their "exit door" icon.
2 0 Reply
Yep, my high school computer science class looked just like this. Thanks for the memories.
6 0 ReplyYup, mine, too. I don't remember which version it was, but I'm pretty sure it was still "Turbo" (not "Borland") Pascal, in the late 1990s. Grade 10 computer science was taught on Macintosh QuickBasic and then grades 11 and 12 were "real" programming in Turbo Pascal.
2 0 Reply
I had to learn pascal at college in the early 90s .
And some long called Jackson Structured Programming, which effectively put me off development for life.
Also : why is there a photo from 100 years ago ?
1 2 Reply