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In article <vefvo0$k1mm$1@dont-email.me>, <Muttley@DastartdlyHQ.org> wrote:On Sat, 12 Oct 2024 16:36:26 -0000 (UTC)>
It can mean either. Essentially its a binary that contains directly runnable
CPU machine code. I'm not sure why you're having such a conceptual struggle
understanding this simple concept.
Oh, I understand what you mean; it's your choice of non-standard
terminology that I object to. Admittedly, Microsoft uses the
Or consider x86; most modern x86 processors are really dataflow
CPUs, and the x86 instruction encoding is just a bytecode that
is, in fact, interpreted by the real CPU under the hood. So
where does that fit on your little shrink-to-fit taxonomy? What
I could bore you with the number I've actually "dealt with" including>
military hardware but whats the point.
Weird appeals to experience, with vague and unsupported claims,
aren't terribly convincing.
You've probably programmed the>
occasional PIC or arduino and think you're an expert.
Ok, Internet Guy.
I disagree. Modern linux reminds me a lot of SunOS and HP-UX from back in>
the day.
Then I can only guess that you never used either SunOS or HP-UX.
Anybody serious presumably meaning you.>
Sorry, you've shown no evidence why I should believe your
assertions, and you've ignored directly disconfirming evidence
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
So in your mind google translate is a "compiler" for spoken languages is it?>
To quote you above, "now you're just being silly."
No, it was a pre-compiler. Just like Oracles PRO*C/C++.>
Nope.
I know the important ones. You've dug out some obscure names from google>
that probably only a few CS courses even mention never mind study the work of.
>
Ok, so you aren't familiar with the current state of the field
as far as systems go; fair enough.
Aho, Sethi, and Ullman: "Simply stated, a compiler is a program
that reads a program written in one language -- the _source_
language -- and translates it into an equivalent program in
another language -- the _target_ language."
So it would seem that your definition is not shared by those who
quite literally wrote the book on compilers.
Look, I get the desire to want to pin things down into neat
little categorical buckets, and if in one's own experience a
"compiler" has only ever meant GCC or perhaps clang (or maybe
Microsoft's compiler), then I can get where one is coming from.
But as usual, in its full generality, the world is just messier
than whatever conceptual boxes you've built up here.
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