Java combines these ideas in a way that will take some explaining. To run a Java program the source file is first translated into a file of bytecodes.
A Java bytecode is a machine instruction for a Java processor. A file of bytecodes is a machine language program for a Java processor.
Conceptually, a Java processor is a silicon processor chip that directly executes a machine language called Java bytecodes. This is like an Intel processor that directly executes Intel machine language.
The picture shows the Java compiler translating
the sample Java program Hello.java
into bytecodes.
The file of bytecodes is called
Hello.class.
In this picture, the source program Hello.java
is examined by
a program called javac
running on your computer.
The javac program is a compiler (a translator) that translates the source
program into a bytecode file called Hello.class.
Important Idea: The bytecode file will contain exactly the same bytecodes no matter what computer the javac compiler runs on.
The architecture of the processor that executes Java bytecodes is well-documented and is available to anyone. The Java compiler on a Macintosh will produce the same bytecodes as the Java compiler on an Intel system.
Could a processor chip be built that executes Java bytecodes directly, just as an Intel processor chip executes its machine language directly?