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Full Discussion: Turbo C
Top Forums Programming Turbo C Post 302396848 by Corona688 on Friday 19th of February 2010 12:50:01 PM
Old 02-19-2010
Turbo C is a C compiler for DOS that hasn't been extant for about 20 years. It's very out of date, missing quite a lot of headers that code these days demands, has others renamed to things you'd never guess, can only compile 16-bit code, is highly quirky, and really isn't good anything but DOS development. It has to run under DOS emulation to work at all in modern Windows, let alone any UNIX. About all I appreciate in it these days are the help files:
Image

As such any C tutorials I find for you are unlikely to apply to the old, strange dialect of the C standards Turbo C understands. It may be a free release now, but there's better free compilers than this. What is your system?
 

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REP(1)																	    REP(1)

NAME
rep - Read, Eval, Print Interpreter SYNOPSIS
rep [ FILE ] [ --batch ] [ --interp ] [ -f, --call FUNCTION ] [ -l, --load FUNCTION ] [ -s, --scheme FILE ] [ --version ] [ --no-rc ] [ -q, --quit ] DESCRIPTION
rep `librep' is a dialect of Lisp, designed to be used both as an extension language for applications and as a general purpose programming language. It was originally written to be mostly-compatible with Emacs Lisp, but has subsequently diverged markedly. Its aim is to combine the best features of Scheme and Common Lisp and provide an environment that is comfortable for implementing both small and large scale sys- tems. It tries to be a "pragmatic" programming language. OPTIONS
FILE load the Lisp file FILE (from the cwd if possible, implies --batch mode) --batch Batch mode: process options and exit. --interp Interpreted mode: don't load compile Lisp files. -f FUNCTION --call FUNCTION Call the Lisp function FUNCTION. -l FILE --load FILE Load the file of Lisp forms called FILE. -s FILE --scheme FILE Load the file of Scheme forms called FILE (implies --batch mode). --version Print version details. --no-rc Don't load rc or site-init files. -q --quit Terminate the interpreter process. SEE ALSO
The programs are documented fully by John Harper available via the Info system. AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Christian Marillat <marillat@debian.org> for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). 04 avril 2003 REP(1)
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