1 introduction
1.1 language processors
1.2 the structure of a compiler
1.3 the evolution of programming languages
1.4 the science of building a compiler
1.5 applications of compiler technology
1.6 programming language basics
1.7 summary of chapter 1
1.8 references for chapter 1
2 a simple syntax-directed translator
2.1 introduction
2.2 syntax definition
2.3 syntax-directed translation
2.4 parsing
2.5 a translator for simple expressions
2.6 lexical analysis
2.7 symbol tables
2.8 intermediate code generation
2.9 summary of chapter 2
3 lexical analysis
3.1 the role of the lexical analyzer
3.2 input buffering
3.3 specification of tokens
3.4 recognition of tokens
3.5 the lexical-analyzer generator lex
3.6 finite automata
3.7 from regular expressions to automata
3.8 design of a lexical-analyzer generator
3.9 optimization of dfa-based pattern matchers
3.10 summary of chapter 3
3.11 references for chapter 3
4 syntax analysis
4.1 introduction
4.2 context-free grammars
4.3 writing a grammar
4.4 -down parsing
4.5 bottom-up parsing
4.6 introduction to lr parsing: simple lr
4.7 more powerful lr parsers
4.8 using ambiguous grammars
4.9 parser generators
4.10 summary of chapter 4
4.11 references for chapter 4
5 syntax-directed translation
5.1 syntax-directed definitions
5.2 evaluation orders for sdd's
5.3 applications of syntax-directed translation
5.4 syntax-directed translation schemes
5.5 hnplementing l-attributed sdd's
5.6 summary of chapter 5
5.7 references for chapter 5
6 intermediate-code generation
6.1 variants of syntax trees
6.2 three-address code
6.3 types and declarations
6.4 translation of expressions
6.5 type checking
6.6 control flow
6.7 backpatching
6.8 switch-statements
6.9 intermediate code for procedures
6.10 summary of chapter 6
6.11 references for chapter 6
7 run-time environments
7.1 storage organization
7.2 stack allocation of space
7.3 access to nonlocal data on the stack
7.4 heap management
7.5 introduction to garbage collection
7.6 introduction to trace-based collection
7.7 short-pause garbage collection
7.8 advanced ics in garbage collection
7.9 summary of chapter 7
7.10 references for chapter 7
8 code generation
8.1 issues m the design of a code generator
8.2 the target language
8.3 addresses in the target code
8.4 basic blocks and flow graphs
8.5 optimization of basic blocks
8.6 a simple code generator
8.7 peephole optimization
8.8 register allocation and assignment
8.9 instruction selection by tree rewriting
8.10 optimal code generation for expressions
8.11 dynamic programming code-generation
8.12 summary of chapter 8
8.13 references for chapter 8
9 machine-independent optimizations
9.1 the principal sources of optimization
9.2 introduction to data-flow analysis
9.3 foundations of data-flow analysis
9.4 constant propagation
9.5 partial-redundancy elimination
9.6 loops in flow graphs
9.7 region-based analysis
9.8 symbolic analysis
9.9 summary of chapter 9
9.10 references for chapter 9
10 instruction-level parallelism
10.1 processor architectures
10.2 code-scheduling constraints
10.3 basic-block scheduling
10.4 global code scheduling
10.5 software pipelining
10.6 summary of chapter 10
10.7 references for chapter 10
11 optimizing for parallelism and locality
11.1 basic concepts
11.2 matrix multiply: an in-depth example
11.3 iteration spaces
11.4 aftlne array indexes
11.5 data reuse
11.6 array data-dependence analysis
11.7 finding synchronization-free parallelism
11.8 synchronization between parallel loops
11.9 pipelining
11.10 locality optimizations
11.11 other uses of affine transforms
11.12 summarv of chapter 11
11.13 references for chapter 11
12 interprocedural analysis
12.1 basic concepts
12.2 why interprocedural analysis?
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