The comp.compilers newsgroup

Comp.compilers is a moderated usenet news group addressing the topics of compilers in particular and programming language design and implementation in general. It started in 1986 as a moderated mailing list, but interest quickly grew to the point where it was promoted to a news group. Recent topics have included optimization techniques, language design issues, announcements of new compiler tools, and book reviews.

Messages come from a wide variety of people ranging from undergraduate students to well-known experts in industry and academia. Authors live all over the world -- there are regular messages from the U.S, Canada, Europe, Australia, and Japan, with occasional ones from as far away as Malaysia. The estimated total readership is over 100,000, which makes it by far the most widely read medium on the topic in the world. Messages may be submitted via the post function in any usenet news program, or by e-mail to compilers@iecc·com.

You can read messages as comp.compilers on usenet, as web pages on this web site (see below and to the right for RSS feeds), and as an e-mail mailing list. The messages are the same no matter which way you read it.

Follow us on twitter

Comp.compilers now has its own twiter feed at http://twitter.com/compcompilers. Each message posted gets a tweet with the subject and a link to the message's web page.

In blog-land

Comp.compilers is also available as an RSS feed, indexing the articles archived here. The RSS feed is updated in real time and shows the most recent articles posted, skipping over the boilerplate articles posted on the first of each month.

The link to the RSS feed is http://compilers.iecc.com/comparch/rss. By default it shows ten articles, but you can tell it to show up to 100 articles by adding /n=NN to the end of the URL, where NN is the number of articles you want to see.

Site search

This site is designed to be fully indexed by search engines, so Google, Bing, et al. should be able to find all but the most recently added articles. There is also a local search engine for subjects (updated as articles are published) and full-text article contents (updated nightly).

Search the compilers archive using Google
Compilers Search
Search the compilers archive using the local index
Search in: Subject Full text    Start at:  End at:
Search words:

Recent articles

Ada-Europe conference - 7 Feb Journal Track Extended Deadline Dirk.Craeynest@cs.kuleuven.be (2025-01-12)
Paper: Developing a Modular Compiler for a Subset of a C-like Language johnl@taugh.com (John R Levine) (2025-01-09)
Paper: Finding Missed Code Size Optimizations in Compilers using LLMs johnl@taugh.com (John R Levine) (2025-01-03)
Looking for Dr. Hans-Peter Diettrich (aka DoDi) grigpavl@ece.auth.gr (Grigoris Pavlakis) (2024-12-19)
12th Ada Developer Room at FOSDEM 2025 - Sun 2 Feb - Brussels Dirk.Craeynest@cs.kuleuven.be (2024-12-19)
Announcing Ox release 1.12.1 thomas.evans.shields@gmail.com (Tom Shields) (2024-12-03)
Compiling by partial evaluation johnl@taugh.com (John R Levine) (2024-11-19)
Assistant Professor of computer science, Bowdoin College, USA brianhelder@proton.me (Brian Helder) (2024-11-16)
STAF/SLE 2025: Call for Workshop Proposals (Germany, June 2025) chisvasileandrei@gmail.com (Andrei Chis) (2024-11-07)
What is dynamic compilation? costello@mitre.org (Roger L Costello) (2024-11-04)
CfP - Ada Developer Room at FOSDEM 2025, Brussels, Belgium Dirk.Craeynest@cs.kuleuven.be (2024-11-02)
C compiler conformance testing: with ChatGPT assistance derek-nospam@shape-of-code.com (Derek) (2024-10-31)
A paper proposing scheduling languages for compiler optimization johnl@taugh.com (John R Levine) (2024-10-30)
RE: LR Parsing of Permutation Phrases christopher.f.clark@compiler-resources.com (Christopher F Clark) (2024-10-12)
draft: LR Parsing of Permutation Phrases johnl@taugh.com (John R Levine) (2024-10-10)

| Index of all articles for this month|

Compiler job messages

Help wanted and Position Available messages are collected each week and posted in a digest every Sunday. Since comp.compilers readers live all over the world, messages should include some hint about the location of the job, whether the employer will consider relocating people who live somewhere else, or consider applicants who are not residents of their country. See recent job digests. Job messages may be submitted the same way as any other message, by mail to compilers@iecc·com.

Add comp.compilers to your favorite blog reader


Add to My Yahoo!


Local links

Full text search for articles

Monthly index of articles

The comp.compilers FAQ

Other regularly posted material including directories of compiler tools

File archive

Jack Crenshaw's Let's Write a Compiler

This page © 1996-2018 I.E.C.C.
CAN SPAM address harvesting notice: the operator of this website will not give, sell, or otherwise transfer addresses maintained by this website to any other party for the purposes of initiating, or enabling others to initiate, electronic mail messages.

I.E.C.C.
PO Box 727
Trumansburg, N.Y. 14886
Phone: +1 646 570 1224
Email: webmaster@iecc.com