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I understand that Java does optimizations across the board and can optimize switches depending on how many cases there are, whether the switch is sparse or dense, and if the code is even hot enough for the JIT to optimize said code. I'm just wondering if I need to further provide "assist" like using bitwise and on the variable being tested or bitwise shift the variable to a "nicer" number, assuming said code is indeed very hot. "nicer" being 0xXX rather than 0xFFXX. Are there hotspot JIT docs that specifically state what's required? Rather than "just keep it along the general programming guidelines of xxx."

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The decision for either tableswitch or lookupswitch is already done by the javac compiler. I have never heard that the JIT tries to transform a lookupswitch into a tableswitch.

So your first step should be a check into what bytecode javac translated your switch.

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  • So, what would be the safe coding assumptions (Specific internal compiler rules) to make sure javac makes it into a tableswitch? Rather than just "guessing" and doing trial-and-error and going into the bytecode, which feels "dirty" to do. Oct 3, 2011 at 3:29
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There is not going to be an easy answer to this.

I would take this question to hotspot-dev - they may be able to provide more information about how this happens.

The other people who may have interesting perspectives on this hang out on the jvm-l mailing list (Charlie Nutter, Remi Forax, John Rose, etc.)

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Because Java itself runs over a virtual machine, unless I'm missing something here, I don't think there's an easy way to do this.

So with Java, you get a black box of sorts, and to optimize more is risky, IMHO.

For the Hotspot JIT whitepaper, see here

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    I was afraid this was going to be the answer. I was just wondering about the conditions for hotspot or comparable JIT to optimize a dense switch into a dispatch table after it has been found to be hot and elected for optimization. Sep 29, 2011 at 2:24
  • I see what you mean there. Hmm, I will put a Bounty on this question once I can. Sep 29, 2011 at 2:33

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