[KDE Dot News]
 faq
 flatforty
 contribute
 subscribe
 configure
 search
 rdf

 main
 parent
 thread


Re: Native code FUD
by Rayiner Hashem on Sunday 08/Aug/2004, @18:19
"Managed code" and "native code" have rather precise definitions. Managed code is stored as an abstract bytecode, and compiled *on-the-fly* to machine code. Native code is stored as machine code, and executed directly. JIT's and compilers available at runtime blur the lines, but the fundemental distinction is still that JIT's compile on the fly by default, and cache native code as an optimization, while native compilers use native code by default, but make it possible to regenerate that code. Certainly, using the accepted definitions of "native code compiler" and "managed code compiler," Java/C# are managed code platforms, while LLVM/CMUCL/etc are native code platforms.
  Related Links
 ·   Articles on Community and Events
 ·   Also by Rayiner Hashem
 ·   Contact author

Thread Threshold:

The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whomever posted them.
( Reply )

  "Nobody will ever write that kind of HTML code!" -- The KHTML Team
KDE®, "K Desktop Environment", "KDE Dot News", "got the dot?" and the KDE Logo® are trademarks or registered trademarks of KDE e.V. in the European Union, the United States and other countries. All other trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners. Comments are owned by the poster. The rest: Copyright © 2000-2008 KDE e.V. for The KDE Project. For further information or comments on this site, please contact the Webmaster.
[ home | post article | flat forty | subscribe | search | rdf ]