From: cswhite AT comp DOT uark DOT edu (Christopher White) Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.djgpp Subject: Re: need advice on djgpp vs. Turbo C Date: 17 Oct 1996 14:04:36 GMT Organization: The University of Arkansas Lines: 28 Message-ID: <545edk$94v@picayune.uark.edu> References: <542of0$60e AT csugrad DOT cs DOT vt DOT edu> NNTP-Posting-Host: comp.uark.edu To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com DJ-Gateway: from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp mbryant AT csugrad DOT cs DOT vt DOT edu (Marc H. Bryant) writes: >Hi, > I have been shopping around for a C compiler >(for my brother), and have recently stumbled accross >djgpp. I havn't tried it out, but was wondering if >I could get your advice on how it compares with >Borland's Turbo C/C++ (for dos... v3.0 i think). >My brother has an old 386sx, with very limited hd space, >5meg ram, no cd-rom. For this reason, I have been >looking for a cheap, prefferebly dos-based, small, >compiler. djgpp seems to fit these requirements, but >noticed that the faq said it had a steep learning >curve. Since my brother is relatively new at C, >I was wondering if it would be worth buying an >older version of TC instead of going with djgpp. >I'd appreciate any and all advice... TIA. >marc One thing to consider is that Borland has practically dropped all support for it's DOS-based compilers. Just visit their homepage - you'll see nothing about Turbo C++ 3.0. And I highly doubt there will be another version (DOS-based) released. That's one reason to go with DJGPP.