![]() Visual C++ 4.0, released on, introduced the Developer Studio IDE.Visual C++ 2.1 and 2.2 were updates for 2.0 available through subscription.There was a Visual C++ 2.0 RISC Edition for MIPS and Alpha processors, as well as a cross-platform edition for the Macintosh ( 68000 instruction set). It is available through Microsoft Developer Network. Visual C++ 2.x also supported Win32s development. Microsoft included and updated Visual C++ 1.5 as part of the 2.x releases up to 2.1, which included Visual C++ 1.52, and both 16-bit and 32-bit version of the Control Development Kit (CDK) were included. In many ways, this version was ahead of its time, since Windows 95, then codenamed "Chicago", was not yet released, and Windows NT had only a small market share. Visual C++ 2.0, which included MFC 3.0, was the first version to be 32-bit only.It was also available in a bundle called Visual C++ 16/32-bit Suite, which included Visual C++ 1.5. Although released when 16-bit version 1.5 was available, it did not include support for OLE2 and ODBC. Visual C++ 1.0 (original name: Visual C++ 32-bit Edition) released in 1993 was the first version for 32-bit development for the Intel 386 architecture.It is the last, and arguably most popular, development platform for Microsoft Windows 3.x. Visual C++ 1.52c was a patched version of 1.5.Visual C++ 1.52b is similar to 1.52, but does not include the Control Development Kit.Visual C++ 1.51 and 1.52 were available as part of a subscription service.It was the first version of Visual C++ that came only on CD-ROM. Visual C++ 1.5 was released in December 1993, included MFC 2.5, and added OLE 2.0 and ODBC support to MFC. ![]() The Phar Lap 286 DOS Extender Lite was also included. ![]() Included the ability to build both DOS and Windows applications, an optimizing compiler, a source profiler, and the Windows 3.1 SDK. It was Cfront 2.1 compliant and available in two editions: Visual C++ 1.0, which included MFC 2.0, was the first version of ‘Visual’ C++, released in February 1993.Added built-in support for C++ and MFC (Microsoft Foundation Class Library) 1.0. Requires a 386 processor and uses the provided 386-Max dos extender (dosx32). It added the Programmer's Workbench IDE, global flow analysis, a source browser, and a new debugger, and included an optional C++ front end. The eleven 720k 3.5" disk version included with the OS/2 Software Development Kit included MASM 5.1 (a single executable that worked under both MSDOS and OS/2 1.x). The fourteen 5.25" disk (two of which were 1.2 MB, the others 360k) version included QuickC. C 5.1 released in 1988 allowed compiling programs for OS/2 1.x.Microsoft Fortran and the first 32-bit compiler for 80386 were also part of this project. C 5.0 added loop optimizations and ‘huge memory model’ ( arrays bigger than 64 KB) support.C 4.0 added optimizations and CodeView, a source-level debugger.It was being used inside Microsoft (for Windows and Xenix development) in early 1984. ![]() This version intended compatibility with K&R and the later ANSI standard.
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