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Groups > comp.lang.pascal.borland > #188
| From | Marco van de Voort <marcov@toad.stack.nl> |
|---|---|
| Newsgroups | comp.lang.pascal.borland |
| Subject | Re: Why did Turbo Pascal implement its own heap manager? |
| Date | 2017-03-09 09:22 +0000 |
| Organization | Stack Usenet News Service |
| Message-ID | <slrnoc27n0.fm1.marcov@toad.stack.nl> (permalink) |
| References | <ed1b7454-1574-488f-ba8c-43de064a0d2c@googlegroups.com> |
On 2017-02-08, Jim Leonard <MobyGamer@gmail.com> wrote: > The only possible reason I can think of is that Borland's management only > uses 8 bytes of overhead instead of DOS's 16 bytes per overhead (per MCB), > so I guess the advantage was that you could use 8 less bytes per > allocation, and also allow a minimum allocation of 8 bytes instead of > DOS's 16 bytes. Or something requiring control in e.g. overlays ?
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Why did Turbo Pascal implement its own heap manager? Jim Leonard <MobyGamer@gmail.com> - 2017-02-08 15:31 -0800
Re: Why did Turbo Pascal implement its own heap manager? "Gene Buckle" <gene.buckle@bbs.retroarchive.org.remove-101r-this> - 2017-02-14 14:17 -0800
Re: Why did Turbo Pascal implement its own heap manager? Jim Leonard <mobygamer@gmail.com> - 2017-03-08 08:49 -0800
Re: Why did Turbo Pascal implement its own heap manager? Marco van de Voort <marcov@toad.stack.nl> - 2017-03-09 09:22 +0000
Re: Why did Turbo Pascal implement its own heap manager? sillyluis <sillyluis@gmail.com> - 2017-03-14 10:31 -0700
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