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- From: wille@june.cs.washington.edu (Robert Wille)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.programmer
- Subject: Re: SAS/C - Borland C++
- Message-ID: <1992Sep15.213256.19260@beaver.cs.washington.edu>
- Date: 15 Sep 92 21:32:56 GMT
- References: <34946@cbmvax.commodore.com> <heinz.03ga@edohwg.UUCP> <92259.151607TEW105@psuvm.psu.edu>
- Sender: news@beaver.cs.washington.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: University of Washington Computer Science
- Lines: 26
-
- In article <92259.151607TEW105@psuvm.psu.edu>, <TEW105@psuvm.psu.edu> writes:
- |> I'd rather prefer the environment we have now. It gives us alot of
- |> flexibility and 6.0 appears to add even more. Borland's C compiler isn't
- |> even ANSI compliant. And I personally don't like the editor with any
- |> Borland product except Turbo Pascal 6.0 (I didn't say I liked LSE, at
- |> least the 5.10 version that much either, but there are many text
- |> editors available for the Amiga, and if they have an AREXX port they
- |> should be able to interface with SAS/C 6.0 error message system,
- |> the only way to get something like that out of Borland is to use
- |> there editor, doesn't leave you much choice does it?)
-
- Well, it still does. There are many editors which will interface with
- command-line compilers, and Borland includes a command-line compiler.
- There are lots of people I know that use Brief with Borland C++. Borland
- also lets you bind your keys how you like them (admittedly, its not
- straightforward, but it can be done). At work we created a compiler
- that would take script files and generate code from them. We could
- edit and compile our scripts from Borland's integrated environment
- just like we could with C code. There is a lot more power and flexibility
- in Borland's integrated environment than meets the eye.
-
- --
- Robert
-
- There is evidence that the brain is like a computer. If that's true,
- then there really aren't any stupid people. Just people running DOS.
-