Borland Developer Studio 2006 Setup Free
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The Borland.com web site (which is mirrored from the Borland support site) has a page for each new release with a featured introduction to the product in question, the license terms for each edition, and a link to download the product. The Borland.com Turbo page lists the editions, their prices, and feature differences, with links to download the product. On September 14, 2006, a free 30-day trial of each edition was made available to download, and on September 20, 2006, a free 30-day trial of each edition was made available in a downloadable installation package.
The Borland Delphi products are available for purchase as standalone products, and it is also possible to license the Borland Delphi IDE (which is the runtime library and compiler) as an add-on to the Borland Studio product suite. The Borland Studio suite is available in enterprise editions (for large organizations with support contracts) and for individual purchase.
Delphi first shipped in 1990 under the name Borland Delphi. It was a commercial product, released for MS-DOS, OS/2, DOS, OS/390, and Windows (although not Windows NT). The IDE was for personal use only; the runtime library and compiler came in separate packages. Borland Delphi 2 was designed to replace Borland's Pascal-based Turbo Pascal from 1985, and it would also replace the Macintosh Borland Turbo Pascal product from 1985. Borland Delphi 2 ran natively on Motorola 68000-based OS/2 on the desktop or on PowerPC IBM-compatible PCs, and it could be used on the Macintosh. In 1991 Borland released the first of a series of extended versions (Borland Delphi 3, Borland Pascal 7, Borland Pascal 8, Borland Delphi 3 Extended, Borland Delphi 4, Borland Delphi 4 Extended, Borland Delphi 5, Borland Delphi 5 Extended, Borland C++ Builder, Borland C++ Builder 2, Borland Turbo Pascal 2003, Borland Delphi 4.1), each of which included a number of new and updated components, and each of which (with the exception of Borland Turbo Pascal 2003) included a set of extensions to the IDE.
The single language editions are named after the language they support; the editions include the same set of tool sets and features as the multi-language editions. You can use the same Visual Studio IDE and work with just the languages you need, or you can mix and match. The single language editions have the same name, but with a different product number; for example, there are two products named Turbo C++, which are separate editions, the Explorer edition being free and the Professional edition costing $899. The brand name Turbo is not part of the product names.
I would like to point out that CMake is not a make replacement. It is a cross-platform tool for generating build rules and libraries. It also provides wrappers for different compilers, so that you don't have to reinvent the wheel. As the other developers mentioned, there are already good examples for how to use it. The documentation is also OK.
The IDE is a rich toolkit with features and functionality that is very convenient to develop in. But some of it is optional, and some (notably the autocompletion) is not used by every developer. So in my view the IDE is useful, but not essential. 827ec27edc