That program might not support MS-DOS..
The only solution is to run the application in Windows and not from a MS-DOS only system.
Start=>Run=>msdos
The program segment prefix (PSP) in MSDOS is the first 256 bytes of memory allocated by the command interpreter to load and run a program. The program itself is loaded next. The first 128 bytes of the PSP contains various structures and pointers. The second 128 bytes of the PSP initially contain the command line, and is then available as the default disk buffer for subsequent I/O.
Sure, if the compiler is written for Windows32 or Windows64. You cannot run compilers written for other platforms (MsDos, Windows16, linux, etc).
Answerif u mean that when result screen runs in infinity due to run time errors then solution is press ctrl+pause break to stop result screen. AnswerRun your program in a separate MsDos-window (CMD.EXE or COMMAND.COM)
That would typically refer to an MS-DOS program. On 32-bit Windows, you could run this simply by double-clicking on it. On 64-bit Windows, you can use an emulator like DOSBox.
Many commands are still easy to run from command prompt..
you cannot do it. [Creator:NetBeans IDE 7.1.2]
No, Unix is an operating system program. A utility program cannot run by itself; it runs under an operating system.
It is not possible for a Windows 95 program KeyCAD Pro to be run using Windows 7. The best solution would be to try and find the same program in an upgraded version that will run on Windows 7.
Assuming you're meaning to check if the program works - run it with some test data that you know what the solution should be be if the program works correctly. If you get the expected result, the program is fine - if not - it needs de-bugging.
When a program cannot run in DOS mode it means it's a Windows file. Unless you get a specific program (you'll have to look into it) you can't use any Windows programs.