← Back to context Comment by wqweto 9 months ago Btw, dont’t remember Turbo C or Borland C++ to be able to compile to 32-bit x86 on DOS 1 comment wqweto Reply jasomill 9 months ago Borland C++, Microsoft C/C++, and GCC (DJGPP[1]) could all target 32-bit extended DOS, but Watcom was the first[2] to bundle a royalty-free DOS extender[3].[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DOS_extender
jasomill 9 months ago Borland C++, Microsoft C/C++, and GCC (DJGPP[1]) could all target 32-bit extended DOS, but Watcom was the first[2] to bundle a royalty-free DOS extender[3].[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DOS_extender
Borland C++, Microsoft C/C++, and GCC (DJGPP[1]) could all target 32-bit extended DOS, but Watcom was the first[2] to bundle a royalty-free DOS extender[3].
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DOS_extender