A cross-platform version for Linux and OS X is reportedly planned.
#Borland c 64bit windows#
Later versions incorporated Borland CLX, a cross-platform development visual component library based on Qt, that supports Windows and Linux, however CLX is now abandoned. History Borland C++Builder Ĭ++Builder originally targeted only the Microsoft Windows platform.
#Borland c 64bit code#
The reverse (C++ code being used by Delphi) is not as straightforward but possible.
The Delphi compiler emits C++ headers, allowing C++ code to link to Delphi classes and methods as though they were written in C++. Notable shared Delphi (Object Pascal code) and C++ Builder routines include the FastMM4 memory manager, which was developed as a community effort within the FastCode project, the entire UI framework known as the VCL, which is written in Object Pascal, as well as base system routines, many of which have been optimised for both Delphi and C++Builder through the FastCode project.Ĭ++Builder projects can include Delphi code. Since both Delphi and C++ use the same back end linker, in debugging we can single step from Delphi code into C++ transparently.Ĭ++Builder includes tools that allow drag-and-drop visual development, making programming easier by incorporating a WYSIWYGgraphical user interface builder.Ĭ++Builder uses the same IDE as Delphi, and shares many core libraries. With this approach we can call C++ from Object Pascal and vice versa. Binary code generated by Delphi can easily be linked to binary code generated by C++Builder and vice versa to generate an executable written in both Object Pascal and C++. Most components developed in Delphi can be used in C++Builder with no or little modification, although the reverse is not true, but this constraint is valid only for source code. C++Builder combines the Visual Component Library and IDE written in Object Pascal with multiple C++ compilers. This Site is Inactive This site has been marked as inactive because no members have logged in recently.Ĭ++Builder is a rapid application development (RAD) environment, originally developed by Borland and as of 2009 owned by Embarcadero Technologies (a subsidiary of Idera), for writing programs in the C++ programming language targeting Windows NT (IA-32 and 圆4), macOS, iOS and Android.