- #COMPAQ VISUAL FORTRAN 6.6 INSTALL#
- #COMPAQ VISUAL FORTRAN 6.6 UPGRADE#
- #COMPAQ VISUAL FORTRAN 6.6 PORTABLE#
- #COMPAQ VISUAL FORTRAN 6.6 SOFTWARE#
- #COMPAQ VISUAL FORTRAN 6.6 TRIAL#
Technical Data for Commercial Items are licensed to the U.S.
#COMPAQ VISUAL FORTRAN 6.6 SOFTWARE#
Consistent with FAR 12.211 and 12.212,Ĭommercial Computer Software, Computer Software Documentation, and ISML and Visual Numerics are trademarks of Visual Numerics, Inc.Īll other product names mentioned herein may be trademarks of theirĬonfidential computer software. GLOBE trotter and FlexLM are trademarks of Intel and Pentium are trademarks of Intel Corporation.ĪMD and Athlon are trademarks of Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.Īdobe and Acrobat are trademarks of Adobe Systems Incorporated. Trademarks or registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the Microsoft, NT, Visual Basic, Visual C++, and Windows are either Trademarks of Compaq Information Technologies, L.P. Patent andĪlphaGeneration, AlphaServer, DEC Fortran, OpenVMS, and Tru64 UNIX are "Missing SETLOCAL" when initializing Visual Studio Command Prompt.This document contains information about Compaq Visual Fortran fromĬOMPAQ and the Compaq Logo are registered in the U.S. How to? Installing TCMD for a single language
#COMPAQ VISUAL FORTRAN 6.6 TRIAL#
NT 8.0.102 purchased version is not longer "registered" since installing trial of TCMD 15. TCC no longer runs after installing TC 17 V23 Everything still referenced after removing v23 and installing v24 How to? "Specified Account Already Exists" error installing TCMD v27
#COMPAQ VISUAL FORTRAN 6.6 PORTABLE#
Your alternative, if you happen to have a valid XP license lying around, is to set up a suitable VM for VMware Player or Oracle Virtualbox (or any other freeware virtual environment of your choice, although sadly not Hyper-V since there is no version that supports Windows 7 as a host), both of which will allow you to create a virtual machine that ought to be portable in future. Beyond that, I'm not sure that I'd go there.
It has one big advantage, in that you don't need to have a separate Windows XP license. On that basis, assuming that you're not intending to stay on Windows 7 forever (which might be a viable option, although MS would like you to believe that XP mode is just as vulnerable as Windows XP itself now that the OS is no longer receiving updates) then Virtual PC/Virtual XP mode is a dead-end. They junked the support in Windows 8, albeit that it was replaced by the much more flexible and arguably far superior Hyper-V and offered no obvious mechanism to migrate virtual machines from the Virtual PC built in to Windows 7 to Hyper-V in Windows 8.
#COMPAQ VISUAL FORTRAN 6.6 UPGRADE#
Microsoft provided Virtual XP mode as a way of helping people upgrade from XP to Windows 7, no more and no less. My reason for suggesting that that might be the better medium to long-term route is simply that as time goes on it may become harder and harder to set things up to run environments that will cope with 16-bit code.
Unfortunately I have no direct experience with the current Fortran compilers (although I've successfully used the Open Watcom C compiler for many years, I suspect their Fortran being 77 only will not suit you - it does successfully compile an old version of Dungeon/Zork that I'd been carrying around since the mid 80s!!) but I believe there is a current Gnu Fortran compiler which has a Windows version. Not wishing to be too contrarian, but you might be better off porting your Fortran environment to a more up-to-date compiler. Good to see another person who appreciates and wants to continue using development tools that do the job, just as good, or better, than the modern development tools. This is designed to run DOS business programs, such as Microsoft Fortran 4.1. If you want to run DOS Business Applications on a modern OS, take a look at vDOS
#COMPAQ VISUAL FORTRAN 6.6 INSTALL#
I was able to install Micro Focus Visual Object COBOL in Windows 98, and am able to run it with no problems in the Virtual Machine. My solution was to install Microsoft Virtual PC 2007, and within it, Microsoft Windows 98. The fault is with Microsoft, and not wanting to be backwards compatible.įor example, I am unable to run Micro Focus Visual Object COBOL on my Microsoft Windows Vista system. Far too many problems, but it is not the fault of Take Command. I have tried running Microsoft COBOL 4.5, dBASE IV 2.0, Micro Focus COBOL, etc., in a modern OS. Forget running Visual Fortran 6.0 in Take Command.