Compilers: Principles, Techniques, and Tools | 
enlarge | Authors: Alfred V. Aho, Ravi Sethi, Jeffrey D. Ullman Publisher: Addison Wesley Category: Book
List Price: $119.80 Buy Used: $4.49 You Save: $115.31 (96%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 67 reviews Sales Rank: 145485
Media: Hardcover Edition: US Ed Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 796 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.7 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.2 x 1.4
ISBN: 0201100886 Dewey Decimal Number: 005.453 EAN: 9780201100884 ASIN: 0201100886
Publication Date: January 1, 1986 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: covers are okay and some pages have hilighting
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Product Description This classic book, known to professors, students, and developers worldwide as "the Dragon Book" is the bible of compiler design. It provides a thorough grounding in the theory and practice of compilers. Now available online are new chapters from the forthcoming second edition. Authors Aho, Lam, Sethi and Ullman have written all new material to address the monumental changes in computing that have occurred since the last edition published in 1986, from high level languages (object-oriented programming) to computer architecture (RISC). New chapters include: Chapter 5 Syntax-Directed Translation Chapter 6 Intermediate-Code Generation Chapter 7 Object-Code Generation Chapter 8 Run-Time Environments Chapter 9 Machine-Independent Optimizations Chapter 10 Instruction-Level Parallelism Chapter 11 Optimizing for Parallelism and Locality To see the online chapters, click here: www.aw.com/dragonbook.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 62 more reviews...
Decent but... June 22, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This book is famous, and when I told people 20 years my senior that I was in compilers and I was using the dragon book, they knew the book. There are probably some changes between editions between now and then, but the fundamentals of compiler design has changed little.
And when it comes to be basics, reading this book can be more like slogging. The information is there, but it isn't quiet clear. Some topics have examples that do most of the explaining, while other topics lack a nice example that would explain it.
Life is a Lex. June 2, 2008 0 out of 3 found this review helpful
The Dragon book is a core text for understand complier theory. Great technical reading for all software developers and software engineers.
The best for getting the theoretical foundation of compilers June 12, 2007 2 out of 6 found this review helpful
This is the classical reference book for compiler design. This is not an easy text because of its heavy use of mathematical notation and the algorithms are presented only in pseudo code but you will not find a more complete collection of compiler related algorithms than in this book.
Warmed over ghost of past excellence May 18, 2007 31 out of 33 found this review helpful
I spent some serious quality time with the first edition (the "red dragon book"), in three main episodes over the past dozen years: 1) undergraduate compilers class, 2) industry project, and 3) parser generator implementation. During all three episodes, I was disappointed in various ways, though there is no denying that the book contains a wealth of information. As an undergraduate, I found the book somewhat impenetrable. When in industry, I found the book too abstract. When implementing a parser generator, I discovered that the book excludes important research results with regard to LR parser generation. It is the last disappointment that I will focus on.
The book presents parser generation in layers of increasing complexity, from SLR to LR to LALR, where LALR is presented as the penultimate algorithm, though LALR parsers can only handle a subset of the grammars that LR can handle. The justification for this is that the original Knuth LR algorithm is intractable for large grammars. However, an efficient, fully correct, approach for LR parser generation was published in 1977, and on top of that it appears easier to implement than efficient LALR parser generation! The red dragon book's original authors simply cannot have been unaware of this research result, but I suspect that they elected to warm over the "green dragon book" (published in 1977) rather than incorporate the state of the art as of 1986 into the "red dragon book". Now here we are another 20 years later, and as near as I can tell from reading through available online information, the "purple dragon book" is perpetuating this omission. The result of the red dragon book is that we have an entire generation of computer scientists who have been mislead to think that LALR is somehow superior to LR, and the purple dragon book is setting things up for yet another generation to be mislead.
The new cover is awesome! Long live the Purple Dragon! May 4, 2007 2 out of 30 found this review helpful
The CGI cover looks great! I only wish it stretched along the spine of the book like in the previous editions.
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