Java compiler
A Java compiler is a compiler for the Java programming language. The most common form of output from a Java compiler are Java class files containing platform-neutral Java bytecode. There exist also compilers emitting optimized native machine code for a particular hardware/operating system combination.
Most Java-to-bytecode compilers, Jikes being a well known exception, do virtually no optimization, leaving this until runtime to be done by the JRE[citation needed].
The Java Virtual Machine (JVM) loads the class files and either interprets the bytecode or just-in-time compiles it to machine code and then possibly optimizes it using dynamic compilation.
The very first Java compiler developed by Sun Microsystems was written in C using some libraries from C++.[citation needed]
Major Java compilers
As of 2010, the following are major Java compilers:
- javac, included in JDK from Sun Microsystems, open-sourced since 13 November 2006.
- GCJ, a part of gcc which compiles C, Fortran, Pascal and other programming languages besides Java. It can also generate native code using the back-end of gcc.
- ECJ, the Eclipse Compiler for Java, is an open source incremental compiler used by the Eclipse JDT.
Java decompilers
A Java decompiler tries to reverse the process of compiling, that is it tries to decompile Java bytecode files (*.class) back to Java source files (*.java).
- DJ Java Decompiler [1] 10 use trial version
- JAD, written in C++, free for non-commercial use.
- JD [2], younger project, includes GUI, optional Eclipse-plugin.
- JODE [3], decompiler and optimizer, open-source.
References
External links
- Sun's OpenJDK javac page
- Jikes homepage
- JSR 199 Java Compiler API Java Specification Request for invoking the Java compiler from a Java program
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