After and seeing some of my earlier Delphi programming again, I was intrigued to try if I couldn’t get Turbo Pascal 7 working too. This was the development environment that I first started programming with in school in 2000. Of course, Windows 10 on an x64 machine has no way of running 16 bit DOS applications, so I needed a different solution. Installing on hardware: fail I do in fact own the full set of Borland Pascal 7 installation floppy disks as well as the manuals. Of course, I can’t install the software from them anymore, as I don’t have a floppy drive.
Fmod sound bank generator. Turbo Pascal is a compiler and an integrated development environment (IDE) for the Pascal language that run on MS-DOS operating system. With Windows XP also. How to install Turbo Pascal on Windows 7 64bit February 23, 2010 Tips & Tricks For all Turbo Pascal fans we have prepared instructions how to install Turbo Pascal on 64 bit version of Windows 7.
Also, I doubt, they would even be readable anymore. But I made a backup of the disks’ contents and kept it was as a ZIP file. I also still have my 1GHz Pentium III powered laptop running Windows ME from 2001. I remember fondly many a night spent sitting on that laptop working on some Turbo Pascal project I had given myself. Unfortunately, the installer would not work as it was complaining about “insufficient memory”. This is funny as the 256 MB of RAM my laptop has were substantially more than computers had when Turbo Pascal 7 was released. Maybe the problem wasn’t that there was too little memory, but rather too much of it.
For instance, there is an integer overflow error in the causing it to report insufficient disk space when it encounters free space close to a multiple of 2GB. Hyper-V: better So next, I tried setting up a virtual machine in. This would allow me to tweak the amount of memory the installer was seeing. While in college I had free access to Virtual PC 2004 and so ended up with one virtual machine for each version of Windows I had owned up to that point. Unfortunately, all of the machines running Windows 9x/ME would fail to boot in Hyper-V. The earliest version to run was Windows XP.
Unfortunately, Windows XP demanded I activate before I was able to even log in. But without an opportunity to install drivers for the virtual network adaptor, it wasn’t able to get an internet connection and for some reason the phone activation failed as well.
I was, however, able to boot Windows into safe mode with command prompt, allowing me to execute the following command to “rearm” the activation and buy me some more time to get the registration issues sorted out, because of course, this was a licensed version of Windows. C: windows system32 rundll32.exe syssetup,SetupOobeBnk After I did that and could log on normally, I still had trouble with getting a network connection between host and VM. So in order to get the Turbo Pascal installer onto the VM, I had to copy it to the VM’s virtual hard drive (VHD).
After and seeing some of my earlier Delphi programming again, I was intrigued to try if I couldn’t get Turbo Pascal 7 working too. This was the development environment that I first started programming with in school in 2000. Of course, Windows 10 on an x64 machine has no way of running 16 bit DOS applications, so I needed a different solution. Installing on hardware: fail I do in fact own the full set of Borland Pascal 7 installation floppy disks as well as the manuals. Of course, I can’t install the software from them anymore, as I don’t have a floppy drive.
Fmod sound bank generator. Turbo Pascal is a compiler and an integrated development environment (IDE) for the Pascal language that run on MS-DOS operating system. With Windows XP also. How to install Turbo Pascal on Windows 7 64bit February 23, 2010 Tips & Tricks For all Turbo Pascal fans we have prepared instructions how to install Turbo Pascal on 64 bit version of Windows 7.
Also, I doubt, they would even be readable anymore. But I made a backup of the disks’ contents and kept it was as a ZIP file. I also still have my 1GHz Pentium III powered laptop running Windows ME from 2001. I remember fondly many a night spent sitting on that laptop working on some Turbo Pascal project I had given myself. Unfortunately, the installer would not work as it was complaining about “insufficient memory”. This is funny as the 256 MB of RAM my laptop has were substantially more than computers had when Turbo Pascal 7 was released. Maybe the problem wasn’t that there was too little memory, but rather too much of it.
For instance, there is an integer overflow error in the causing it to report insufficient disk space when it encounters free space close to a multiple of 2GB. Hyper-V: better So next, I tried setting up a virtual machine in. This would allow me to tweak the amount of memory the installer was seeing. While in college I had free access to Virtual PC 2004 and so ended up with one virtual machine for each version of Windows I had owned up to that point. Unfortunately, all of the machines running Windows 9x/ME would fail to boot in Hyper-V. The earliest version to run was Windows XP.
Unfortunately, Windows XP demanded I activate before I was able to even log in. But without an opportunity to install drivers for the virtual network adaptor, it wasn’t able to get an internet connection and for some reason the phone activation failed as well.
I was, however, able to boot Windows into safe mode with command prompt, allowing me to execute the following command to “rearm” the activation and buy me some more time to get the registration issues sorted out, because of course, this was a licensed version of Windows. C: windows system32 rundll32.exe syssetup,SetupOobeBnk After I did that and could log on normally, I still had trouble with getting a network connection between host and VM. So in order to get the Turbo Pascal installer onto the VM, I had to copy it to the VM’s virtual hard drive (VHD).