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QuickBASIC 1.00 for the Apple Macintosh operating system was launched in 1988. It was officially supported on machines running System 6 with at least 1 MB of RAM. [6] QuickBASIC could also be run on System 7, as long as 32-bit addressing was disabled. QuickBASIC programming was significantly different on the Macintosh, because the system ...
QBasic was intended as a replacement for GW-BASIC.It was based on the earlier QuickBASIC 4.5 compiler but without QuickBASIC's compiler and linker elements. Version 1.0 was shipped together with MS-DOS 5.0 and higher, as well as Windows 95, Windows NT 3.x, and Windows NT 4.0.
Released in versions 1.0, 2.0. 3.0. 4.0, & 4.5. QuickBASIC 4.5 was released in 1988. The QuickBASIC 4.5 IDE includes an interpreter, syntax checking, debugging aids, and online help including a full language reference. Quite BASIC Web-based classic BASIC programming environment. No download or signup necessary. Introduced in 2006. [70]
Free and open-source software portal; QB64 (originally QB32) [1] is a self-hosting BASIC compiler for Microsoft Windows, Linux and Mac OS X, designed to be compatible with Microsoft QBasic and QuickBASIC. QB64 is a transpiler to C++, which is integrated with a C++ compiler to provide compilation via C++ code and GCC optimization. [2]
Liberty Basic v4.03 running on Linux with Wine. A visual development tool called FreeForm, written in Liberty BASIC and greatly extended by the Liberty BASIC community over the years
QuickC is one of three Microsoft programming languages with IDEs of this type marketed in the same period, the other two being QuickBasic [4] and QuickPascal. [5] [6] QuickBasic later gave rise to Visual Basic as well as being included without a linker as QBasic in later versions of MS-DOS, replacing GW-BASIC. QuickC is a lineal ancestor of ...
QuickBASIC versions 4.0 and 4.5 use IEEE 754 floating-point variables by default, but (at least in version 4.5) there is a command-line option /MBF for the IDE and the compiler that switches from IEEE to MBF floating-point numbers, to support earlier-written programs that rely on details of the MBF data formats.
QuickBasic came before any of the QBasic things, which came with DOS and didn't compile (in the help file they encourage users to buy VB-DOS in order to compile QBasic programs - I remember reading that for the first time, even before I had internet access, and thinking "How crummy!").