Related articles |
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[5 earlier articles] |
Re: textbooks and University Degrees in Compiler Design. dwight@pentasoft.com (1998-06-28) |
Re: textbooks and University Degrees in Compiler Design. tinyam@ece.ucdavis.edu (Peter Tin Yam Ho) (1998-06-28) |
Re: textbooks and University Degrees in Compiler Design. dimock@smalltalk.eas.harvard.edu (Allyn Dimock) (1998-06-28) |
Re: textbooks and University Degrees in Compiler Design. thomasl@erix.ericsson.se (Thomas Lindgren) (1998-07-01) |
Re: textbooks and University Degrees in Compiler Design. anton@mips.complang.tuwien.ac.at (1998-07-03) |
Re: textbooks and University Degrees in Compiler Design. ruoccos@comm2000.it (Sergio Ruocco) (1998-07-03) |
Re: textbooks and University Degrees in Compiler Design. shrib@iname.com (Shri Borde) (1998-07-20) |
From: | "Shri Borde" <shrib@iname.com> |
Newsgroups: | comp.compilers |
Date: | 20 Jul 1998 17:04:17 -0400 |
Organization: | Microsoft Corp. |
References: | 98-06-045 98-06-068 98-06-149 98-06-150 98-06-159 98-06-164 |
Keywords: | books |
Peter Tin Yam Ho wrote
>indeed a good book. However, it lacks discussions on newer topics like
>treatment for objected-oriented languages.
How about register allocation, scheduling, interprocedureal optimizations,
garbage collection ? I think the dragon book is quite dated. The Appel book
covers much more topics and is good reading.
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