LB Booster
« LBB as a "console application creator" origins »

Welcome Guest. Please Login or Register.
Apr 1st, 2018, 04:43am



ATTENTION MEMBERS: Conforums will be closing it doors and discontinuing its service on April 15, 2018.
We apologize Conforums does not have any export functions to migrate data.
Ad-Free has been deactivated. Outstanding Ad-Free credits will be reimbursed to respective payment methods.

Thank you Conforums members.
Speed up Liberty BASIC programs by up to ten times!
Compile Liberty BASIC programs to compact, standalone executables!
Overcome many of Liberty BASIC's bugs and limitations!
LB Booster Resources
LB Booster documentation
LB Booster Home Page
LB Booster technical Wiki
Just BASIC forum
BBC BASIC Home Page
Liberty BASIC forum (the original)

« Previous Topic | Next Topic »
Pages: 1  Notify Send Topic Print
 thread  Author  Topic: LBB as a "console application creator" origins  (Read 298 times)
michael
Guest
xx LBB as a "console application creator" origins
« Thread started on: Sep 17th, 2015, 4:32pm »

I had questions burning in my mind as of lately, about the platforms like Liberty Basic and LBB and C...
Liberty Basic works under shop talk systems -which I don't understand
LBB claims to be able to create console type creations.
Yet as far as I know it cant make DLLs
C and C++ work from this pyramid:
machine language
assembly language
c
c++
( C and c++ are related because they are necessary to make DLLs for Liberty Basic and LBB)
I studied the origins of BBC - LBB and I cant figure out where its origins begin.

Was LBB created using this pyramid
machine language
assembly language
BBC - LBB?
User IP Logged

Richard Russell
Administrator
ImageImageImageImageImage


member is offline

Avatar




Homepage PM


Posts: 1348
xx Re: LBB as a "console application creator&quo
« Reply #1 on: Sep 17th, 2015, 6:00pm »

on Sep 17th, 2015, 4:32pm, michael wrote:
Was LBB created using this pyramid
machine language
assembly language
BBC - LBB?

LBB is itself a (BBC) BASIC program, and not a particularly large one: just under 7000 lines of code for the IDE. The BBC BASIC interpreter is written in assembly language (around 64 Kbytes).

Richard.
User IP Logged

Pages: 1  Notify Send Topic Print
« Previous Topic | Next Topic »

| |

This forum powered for FREE by Conforums ©
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Conforums Support | Parental Controls