When Borland decided to stop publishing it (1989), Zale bought it back from them, renamed it PowerBASIC and set up PowerBASIC Inc. Turbo Basic was originally created by Robert "Bob" Zale (1945–2012) and bought from him by Borland. Later it was extended to MS-DOS/PC DOS and in 1987 Borland distributed it as Turbo Basic. The first version of the DOS compiler was published as BASIC/Z, the very first interactive compiler for CP/M and MDOS. 4.3.1.4 Complementarity of GRAPHIC statements and the Windows GDI API.4.3.1.3 Comparison of PB GRAPHIC statements with the GDI API.4.3.1.2 Creating a GRAPHIC WINDOW application.4.3.1.1 Elements of the GRAPHIC statements.2.4 PowerBASIC Compiler for Windows (PBWin).
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