Search references for POWERBASIC. Phrases containing POWERBASIC
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Software compiler
PowerBASIC, formerly Turbo BASIC, was the brand of several commercial compilers by PowerBASIC Inc. that compiled a dialect of the BASIC programming language
PowerBASIC
Family of programming languages
Turbo Basic 1.0 in 1985 (successor versions were marketed under the name PowerBASIC). On Unix-like systems, specialized implementations were created such
BASIC
Traditional first example of a computer programming language
representation Pascal PCASTL PDP-8 Perl Perl module PHP Plack Plua Plus PostScript PowerBASIC Prolog PureBasic Pure Data PureScript PyGTK Python Q QB64 QuickBASIC R
Hello,_world
macOS, Android, iOS) Yes (WebAssembly) Proprietary No No PowerBASIC (formerly Turbo Basic) PowerBASIC, Inc. Inactive Yes No DOS Proprietary ? ? PureBasic Fantaisie
List_of_compilers
Object Pascal 1989 Modula-3 Cardeli, et al. DEC and Olivetti Modula-2 1989 PowerBASIC Robert 'Bob' Zale Turbo Basic 1989 VisSim Peter Darnell, Visual Solutions
Timeline of programming languages
Timeline_of_programming_languages
Defunct American software company
IntraBuilder JBuilder Kylix ObjectVision Turbo Assembler Turbo BASIC (now PowerBASIC) Turbo C Turbo C++ Turbo Debugger Turbo Delphi Turbo Pascal Turbo Pascal
Borland
Topics referred to by the same term
Christian Church Palm Beach Community College Pakistan Blind Cricket Council PowerBASIC Console Compiler Punjab Boards Committee of Chairmen, see Board of Intermediate
PBCC
IDE for the BASIC programming language
Microsoft's Visual Basic was the successor of QuickBASIC. Other compilers, like PowerBASIC and FreeBASIC, have varying degrees of compatibility. QB64, a multiplatform
QuickBASIC
styles using CSS syntax. Samurize supports DLLs compiled with C++, Delphi, PowerBASIC, and FreeBasic, among others. HTML/XML/CSS support can be added by using
Comparison_of_widget_engines
Procedural computer programming language
book is now freely downloadable Basic Compilers: QuickBASIC, PureBasic, PowerBASIC, Blitz Basic, XBasic, Turbo Basic, Visual Basic, FutureBASIC, REALbasic
PureBasic
WordBasic QB64 PureBasic REALbasic (Xojo) TI-BASIC True BASIC Turbo Basic PowerBASIC wxBasic SdlBasic RCBasic XBasic YaBasic MS-DOS Batch files Winbatch CLIST
Generational list of programming languages
Generational_list_of_programming_languages
SPARK STOS BASIC Tcl Mathematica Framework III FRED Bash LPC Modula-3 PowerBASIC Turbo Pascal OOP VisSim FL AMOS BASIC AMPL EuLisp Haskell J Object Oberon
History_of_software
Borland Pascal PAX pax archive file pax, GNU Tar PBLIB Power Library PowerBASIC PBF OpenStreetMap Protobuf-encoded data OpenStreetMap PBM ASCII portable
List of filename extensions (M–R)
List_of_filename_extensions_(M–R)
Floating-point number formats
systems. The Swift standard library provides the Float80 datatype. The PowerBASIC BASIC compiler provides EXT or EXTENDED 10-byte extended-precision floating-point
Extended_precision
P800/P900/P910. PBASIC for use with the Parallax BASIC Stamp microcontroller PowerBASIC (DOS, Win16, Win32) – free and commercial compilers for DOS and Windows
List_of_BASIC_dialects
Floating-point number format by Microsoft
2020-08-28. Retrieved 2016-05-30. "Basic 7.0 for Windows". comp.lang.basic.powerbasic.narkive.com. Archived from the original on 2020-08-28. Retrieved 2016-05-30
Microsoft_Binary_Format
Interpreter that enables users to enter and run programs in the BASIC language
of objects created with other languages, such as how Visual Basic and PowerBASIC supported the Windows Component Object Model. As BASIC interpreters continued
BASIC_interpreter
POWERBASIC
POWERBASIC
POWERBASIC
POWERBASIC
Girl/Female
Arabic
Kindness
Male
English
Variant spelling of English Layton, LEYTON means "leek garden."
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Telugu
Without Direction; Laxmi Devi; Heavenly; Related to Adishakti
Boy/Male
Arabic
Pomp; Magnificence
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from places so called in North Yorkshire, Hampshire, and Kent. The Yorkshire place is named from the Old English personal name Hūna + tūn ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’; that in Hampshire from the genitive plural of hund ‘hound’ + tūn ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’; and the Kentish place from Old English huntena, genitive plural of hunta ‘hunter’ + dūn ‘hill’. The present-day distribution shows clusters in North and South Yorkshire, and also in Norfolk.
Boy/Male
Anglo Saxon
Name of a saint.
Boy/Male
Anglo Saxon
Lucky spearman.
Boy/Male
Hindu
Boy/Male
Biblical
That breaks, that unties, that undresses.
Boy/Male
Muslim
Holy, Pure
POWERBASIC
POWERBASIC
POWERBASIC
POWERBASIC
POWERBASIC