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Post by Carl Gundel on Jan 1, 2024 15:57:49 GMT -5
Hey all, for the next week (until next Monday) I will be offering a 50% discount on Liberty BASIC and Liberty BASIC Pro.
If you want to received the discounted price, send me a private message here and I will reply with instructions!
Looking forward to hearing from you!
-Carl
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Post by Marco Kurvers on Jan 5, 2024 16:27:52 GMT -5
I don't know what is the diffent with Liberty BASIC 4.5.1 and Liberty BASIC Pro?
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Post by Carl Gundel on Jan 5, 2024 16:54:43 GMT -5
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Post by atomose on Jan 5, 2024 17:51:28 GMT -5
the dream : LB 4.52 pro ==> 32bit to 64bit XD
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Post by Marco Kurvers on Jan 10, 2024 6:17:22 GMT -5
Carl, I have read the page about Liberty BASIC Pro. Very nice to use. Mainly the automatic code formatter. No more bugs in the program. Actually, I'm used to indenting. I'll never forget it.
My question is what you mean with a project? If I make a project than I understand that I can use more programs and use it as one project without to insert the files in the program, or maybe I'm wrong?
I still want to think about whether I go from Liberty BASIC 4.5.1 to the Pro version.
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Post by Carl Gundel on Jan 10, 2024 14:32:34 GMT -5
Carl, I have read the page about Liberty BASIC Pro. Very nice to use. Mainly the automatic code formatter. No more bugs in the program. Actually, I'm used to indenting. I'll never forget it. My question is what you mean with a project? If I make a project than I understand that I can use more programs and use it as one project without to insert the files in the program, or maybe I'm wrong? I still want to think about whether I go from Liberty BASIC 4.5.1 to the Pro version. The project allows you to specify all the files that you need for a program and then outputs them all with your executable. It doesn't let you include files as BASIC libraries. You will need LB5 for that. The other really useful thing about LB Pro is the code version and comparison features. So, as you develop your project you can make new versions of the code and you can compare against them. This is great if you want to develop with other people because you can pass the code back and forth and use the compare tool to see what the other person changed, and you can easily merge the code together. Also when you version your code and you suddenly notice a bug but you aren't sure what changed to make the bug sometimes it is really useful to go back one version at a time until the bug is not there, and then compare that version with the next one to see what code change might have caused the bug. Any questions? Anyone who has experience with LB Pro please chime in with your thoughts.
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