InfoWorld in 1980 described CBASIC as the "primary language for the development of commercial CP/M applications", because of developers' widespread familiarity with BASIC and ability to distribute royalty-free binaries without source code to CBASIC owners. The magazine stated that the language had become popular "despite serious drawbacks", including the required
preprocessor for interpreted source code making debugging difficult, slow speed, and incompatible changes. Despite noting "irritants",
Jerry Pournelle in December 1980 praised CBASIC's design and documentation. He said that
BASCOM produced much faster binaries without CBASIC's awkward edit-compile-run-debug loop, however. In May 1982 he said that "advantages abound" in CB80 compared to BASCOM, such as the ability to redimension arrays, and superior
garbage collection. Pournelle assured readers that the documentation was far superior to the usual Digital Research manuals. He denounced, however, the $2000 annual fee to sell software using CB80 as "sheer madness". In September 1982 Pournelle said that CB80 "remains a real competitor to
Pascal and
PL/I [with] few of the inherent defects of BASIC", citing its
local variables and Pascal-like
functions, and approved of its new, freer licensing. He said in May 1983 that Digital Research had "practically ruin[ed]" Eubanks' CBASIC manual after acquiring his company, but that the new edition was much better. ==References==