anyone used these: http://asm.ow2.org/index.html
for example? Seems like a plausible candidate. Stefik On Thu, Aug 18, 2011 at 2:32 PM, Andreas Stefik <[email protected]> wrote: > Hey folks, > > I'm teaching a compiler theory course in ANTLR this fall and am trying > to decide what kind of code I want the students to output to by the > end of the course. I have considered something like Jasmin, as it's in > chapter 9 of Terence's book: > > http://jasmin.sourceforge.net/ > > However, I have some concerns that Jasmin isn't well supported any > more, with the last source check-in, it seems, around 6 years ago, and > am considering something like LLVM: > > http://llvm.org/ > > I'm not an expert in either tool, as in the past I've had students > writing something more akin to a VM, so I'll have a bit of a learning > curve myself before we get into that part of the course. Folks have > any recommendations? Does one or the other, or a third alternative, > have a particularly good/nasty (learning curve | documentation | > real-world applicability | other issue)? Any other better supported > Java byte code generators (which might be preferable)? > > Stefik > List: http://www.antlr.org/mailman/listinfo/antlr-interest Unsubscribe: http://www.antlr.org/mailman/options/antlr-interest/your-email-address -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "il-antlr-interest" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/il-antlr-interest?hl=en.
