Turbo Pascal
0 sources
Turbo Pascal
Summary
Turbo Pascal is a programming language[1]. It ranks in the top 3% of programming_language entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (206 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Turbo Pascal was influenced by Q81571[3].
- Turbo Pascal was influenced by Modula-2[4].
- Turbo Pascal was influenced by Simula[5].
- Turbo Pascal's instance of is recorded as programming language[6].
- Turbo Pascal's instance of is recorded as integrated development environment[7].
- Turbo Pascal's instance of is recorded as object-based language[8].
- Turbo Pascal's developer is recorded as Borland[9].
- Turbo Pascal's developer is recorded as Anders Hejlsberg[10].
- Turbo Pascal's programmed in is recorded as assembly language[11].
- Turbo Pascal's designed by is recorded as Anders Hejlsberg[12].
- Turbo Pascal's operating system is recorded as DOS[13].
- Turbo Pascal's operating system is recorded as CP/M[14].
- Turbo Pascal's operating system is recorded as CP/M-86[15].
- Turbo Pascal's operating system is recorded as Windows 3.x[16].
- Turbo Pascal's operating system is recorded as Classic Mac OS[17].
- Turbo Pascal's Commons category is recorded as Turbo Pascal[18].
- November 20, 1983 marks the founding of Turbo Pascal[19].
- Turbo Pascal was published on 1983[20].
- Turbo Pascal's readable file format is recorded as Turbo Pascal Desktop[21].
- Turbo Pascal's readable file format is recorded as Turbo Pascal configuration[22].
- Turbo Pascal's readable file format is recorded as Borland Turbo Pascal 5.5 compiled Unit[23].
- Turbo Pascal's readable file format is recorded as Borland Turbo Pascal 6.0 compiled Unit[24].
- Turbo Pascal's readable file format is recorded as Borland Turbo Pascal 7.0 compiled Unit[25].
- Turbo Pascal's readable file format is recorded as Turbo Pascal Overlay[26].
- Turbo Pascal's readable file format is recorded as Turbo Pascal Help (v2)[27].
Body
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include programming language[6], integrated development environment[7], and object-based language[8].
History and Context
November 20, 1983 marks the founding of Turbo Pascal[19].
Why It Matters
Turbo Pascal ranks in the top 3% of programming_language entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (206 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 26 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 12 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]
It has been cited as an influence by Turbo Pascal OOP[30], founded in 1989[31].
FAQs
Who did Turbo Pascal influence?
Turbo Pascal has been cited as an influence by Turbo Pascal OOP[30].