Borland C++ targeted the professional application development market, while Turbo C++ targeted the home and hobbyist market. Borland C++ included additional tools, compiler code-optimization, and documentation to address the needs of commercial developers. In 1997 Borland C++ was replaced with Borland C++ Builder.
Manuals are available on Bitsavers
Borland C++ for DOS includes a DOS IDE and compiler, TASM, development libraries for Windows 3.0, Turbo Debugger for DOS, Turbo Debugger for Windows, and Whitewater Resource Toolkit.
There was no "Borland C++ 1.0", it started at 2.0, possibly to differentiate itself from Turbo C++.
| Download name | Version | Language | Architecture | File size | Downloads |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
2.0 | English |
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12.02MB | 2 |
|
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2.0 | English |
|
5.78MB | 0 |
|
|
2.0 and Application Frameworks | English |
|
8.94MB | 1 |