I see there is now a new 'RAD Studio, Delphi and CBuilder Roadmap', posted in August 2010, which says 'Projected availability 1st half 2011'.UPDATE: in in September 2011, he answered the question 'what about c builder 64 bit? Is it discontinued?' With 'We are working on a next generation new CBuilder compiler. This will allow us to get to 64-bit and ARM chips. The compiler is still being built so it could not make XE2. It is on our roadmap and we’ll have it for you.' Elsewhere I have seen that this is predicted (by Embarcadero) to appear in XE3.
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Apr 21, 2017 CBuilder 6 Developer's Guide is revised for the latest version of CBuilder, the biggest update to CBuilder in years. CBuilder is an ANSI C IDE. The Version 6 adds BizSnap, a tool to build Web Services using XML/SOAP,.NET, and BizTalk from Microsoft, and SunONE from Sun Microsystems. Borland c builder 6 Software - Free Download borland c builder 6 - page 5 - Top 4 Download - Top4Download.com offers free software downloads for Windows, Mac, iOS and Android computers and mobile devices. Visit for free, full and secured software’s.
C Builder 64bit support will be released in Q4 2012. However, C Builder XE3 has been released and there was a promo to get the 64bit beta support if you bought support service at the same time.The information I got from the XE3 Road tour was that they still don't know if the 64bit will be considered a 'major' upgrade or not. Meaning that if you buy XE3 now you have to buy an upgrade (again) to get the 64bit in Q4. If it isn't a 'major' upgrade you will get it for free.I was going to upgrade my XE2 to an XE3 but I'm waiting for the official 64bit release instead. If I have waited several years for the 64bit support, I can wait a few more month. Talks about Commodore (Delphi) coming in Winter 2008 with 64-bit support.It mentions Delphi Tiburon (due 2009) which has extra features which is followed by C with those same features (and hopefully 64-bit support).However the 'Borland' article that it links to has disappeared so I guess all bets are off.Seriously, I don't believe there's any room in the IDE space for two costed products. I think Visual Studio will always be the costed product of choice with everyone else choosing a free solution such as Eclipse CDT or bare-bones GCC.I think the Borland products were wonderful for their time (exceeded only by the TopSpeed/JPI compilers and putting Microsoft's early efforts to shame) but they've done their dash and are now relegated to the museum (my opinion only, I've been wrong before, and other various disclaimers).
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