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In article <vegs0o$nh5t$1@dont-email.me>, Bart <bc@freeuk.com> wrote:So, then what, we do away with the concepts of 'compiler' and 'interpreter'? Or allow them to be used interchangeably?On 13/10/2024 16:52, Dan Cross wrote:I'm not saying the two are the same; what I'm saying is thatIn article <QnROO.226037$EEm7.111715@fx16.iad>,>
Scott Lurndal <slp53@pacbell.net> wrote:cross@spitfire.i.gajendra.net (Dan Cross) writes:>In article <vefvo0$k1mm$1@dont-email.me>, <Muttley@DastartdlyHQ.org> wrote:>>Really? So java bytecode will run direct on x86 or ARM will it? Please give>
some links to this astounding discovery you've made.
Um, ok. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jazelle
There was also a company a couple of decades ago that
built an entire processor designed to execute bytecode
directly - with a coprocessor to handle I/O.
>
IIRC, it was Azul. There were a number of others, including
Sun.
>
None of them panned out - JIT's ended up winning that battle.
>
Even ARM no longer includes Jazelle extensions in any of their
mainstream processors.
Sure. But the fact that any of these were going concerns is an
existence proof that one _can_ take bytecodes targetted toward a
"virtual" machine and execute it on silicon,
making the
distinction a lot more fluid than might be naively assumed, in
turn exposing the silliness of this argument that centers around
this weirdly overly-rigid definition of what a "compiler" is.
I've implemented numerous compilers and interpreters over the last few
decades (and have dabbled in emulators).
>
To me the distinctions are clear enough because I have to work at the
sharp end!
>
I'm not sure why people want to try and be clever by blurring the roles
of compiler and interpreter; that's not helpful at all.
this arbitrary criteria that a compiler must emit a fully
executable binary image is not just inadquate, but also wrong,
as it renders separate compilation impossible. I am further
saying that there are many different _types_ of compilers,
including specialized tools that don't emit machine language.
Sure, people can write emulators for machine code, which are a kind ofThat's exactly my point.
interpreter, or they can implement bytecode in hardware; so what?
Is it? It's not to my taste, but it didn't look too scary to me. Whereas modern CPU instruction sets are horrendous. (I normally target x64, which is described in 6 large volumes. RISC ones don't look much better, eg. RISC V with its dozens of extensions and special types)That doesn't really affect what I do. Writing compiler backends forThat really depends on the bytecode, doesn't it? The JVM is a
actual CPUs is hard work. Generating bytecode is a lot simpler.
complex beast;
are pretty simple in comparison.Whether there is a discrete bytecode file is besides the point. (I generated such files for many years.)
(Especially in my case as I've devised myself, another distinction.Python has a mode by which it will emit bytecode _files_, which
Compilers usually target someone else's instruction set.)
>
If you want one more distinction, it is this: with my compiler, the
resultant binary is executed by a separate agency: the CPU. Or maybe the
OS loader will run it through an emulator.
can be separately loaded and interpreted; it even has an
optimizing mode. Is that substantially different?
What shape would that be? Generally they will need some /software/ to excute the instructions of the program being interpreted, as I said. Some JIT products may choose to do on-demand translation to native code.With my interpreter, then *I* have to write the dispatch routines andAgain, I don't think that anyone disputes that interpreters
write code to implement all the instructions.
exist. But insisting that they must take a particular shape is
just wrong.
Actually mine is more of a compiler than many, since it directly generates native machine code. Others generally stop at ASM code (eg. gcc) or OBJ code, and will invoke separate programs to finish the job.(My compilers generate an intermediate language, a kind of VM, which isThen by the definition of this psuedonyminous guy I've been
then processed further into native code.
responding to, your compiler is not a "proper compiler", no?
But is it actually interpreting? Because if I generated such code for a statically typed language, then I would first translate to native code, of any quality, since it's going to be faster than interpreting.But I have also tried interpreting that VM; it just runs 20 times slowerNot necessarily. The JVM does pretty good, quite honestly.
than native code. That's what interpreting usually means: slow programs.)
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