I suspect that at least the Turbo BASIC and TASM manuals should be saved.  The 
only Turbo BASIC that I ever saw in the 80’s is the copy that I bought.

I’m not sure how useful the OpenVMS book is, but it is also somewhat uncommon.  
I recently got a copy with some other books that I bought.

Zane 


Sent from my iPhone

> On Apr 6, 2024, at 3:11 AM, Mike Norris via cctalk <cctalk@classiccmp.org> 
> wrote:
> 
> Hello,
> 
> Before I consign the following books to be recycled I thought I would ask if 
> they are any use to anyone.
> I do not want anything for them except postage, but they are heavy so might 
> be expensive to post from the UK.
> (These are the manuals only no software)
> 
> Manuals
> Borland C++ V4 for Windows - Programmers Guide, User Guide, Library Ref, 
> Debugger, DOS Ref, Library Ref
> Borland C++V2 Object Windows - Reference Guide, Programmers Guide
> Turbo C++ V3 Object Windows - User Guide, Reference Guide
> Turbo C++ V3 User Guide
> Turbo C++ - Library Ref, Getting Started, Programmers Guide, User Guide
> Resource Workshop
> Turbo Assembler V2 (5 books in set)
> Turbo Basic
> 
> Books
> The Waite Group Turbo C Bible
> Developing C++ Software
> 
> Additional
> I would like £5 beer money for this one please!
> Writing Open VMS Alpha Device Drivers in C - Margie Sherlock/Leonard Szubowicz
> 
> 
> Regards Mike Norris

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