9781558606982-155860698X-Engineering a Compiler

Engineering a Compiler

ISBN-13: 9781558606982
ISBN-10: 155860698X
Edition: 1
Author: Keith D. Cooper, Linda Torczon
Publication date: 2003
Publisher: Morgan Kaufmann
Format: Hardcover 832 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781558606982
ISBN-10: 155860698X
Edition: 1
Author: Keith D. Cooper, Linda Torczon
Publication date: 2003
Publisher: Morgan Kaufmann
Format: Hardcover 832 pages

Summary

Engineering a Compiler (ISBN-13: 9781558606982 and ISBN-10: 155860698X), written by authors Keith D. Cooper, Linda Torczon, was published by Morgan Kaufmann in 2003. With an overall rating of 3.5 stars, it's a notable title among other Microeconomics (Economics, Computer Science, Design & Architecture, Hardware & DIY, Programming, Compiler Design, Programming Languages, Compilers) books. You can easily purchase or rent Engineering a Compiler (Hardcover, Used) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Microeconomics books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.52.

Description

The proliferation of processors, environments, and constraints on systems has cast compiler technology into a wider variety of settings, changing the compiler and compiler writer's role. No longer is execution speed the sole criterion for judging compiled code. Today, code might be judged on how small it is, how much power it consumes, how well it compresses, or how many page faults it generates. In this evolving environment, the task of building a successful compiler relies upon the compiler writer's ability to balance and blend algorithms, engineering insights, and careful planning. Today's compiler writer must choose a path through a design space that is filled with diverse alternatives, each with distinct costs, advantages, and complexities.

Engineering a Compiler explores this design space by presenting some of the ways these problems have been solved, and the constraints that made each of those solutions attractive. By understanding the parameters of the problem and their impact on compiler design, the authors hope to convey both the depth of the problems and the breadth of possible solutions. Their goal is to cover a broad enough selection of material to show readers that real tradeoffs exist, and that the impact of those choices can be both subtle and far-reaching.

Authors Keith Cooper and Linda Torczon convey both the art and the science of compiler construction and show best practice algorithms for the major passes of a compiler. Their text re-balances the curriculum for an introductory course in compiler construction to reflect the issues that arise in current practice.

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