Maybe I’m just not well versed enough in DOSBox, but I couldn’t get the IDE to actually run any of the source code I pulled off the floppy. With something like DOSBox I reasoned I should be able to install the QuickBASIC IDE and run them like I was back on my trusty 386. But still, when I found a floppy full of programs I wrote decades ago, I couldn’t help but wonder about getting them running again. The programming languages du jour are worlds more capable than the plodding BASIC variants of the 80’s and 90’s. Of course, that was many years ago, and things are very different now. It seemed too good to be true, how could this technology possibly be improved upon? exe, put it on a floppy, and give it to somebody else to run on their own machine. I could write simple code and compile it into an. At the time, I thought QuickBASIC was more or less indistinguishable from magic. But I did have QuickBASIC installed and a stack of programming magazines the local library was throwing out, so I had plenty to keep myself busy. When I got my first computer, a second hand 386 running MS-DOS 6.22, I didn’t have an Internet connection.
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