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My understanding is that C/C++ produces native code to run on a particular machine architecture. Conversely, languages like Java and C# run atop a virtual machine which abstracts away the native architecture. Logically it would seem impossible for Java or C# to match the speed of C++ because of this intermediate step, however I've been told that the latest compilers ("hot spot") can attain this speed or even exceed it.

Perhaps this is more of a compiler question than a language question, but can anyone explain in plain English how it is possible for one of these virtual machine languages to perform better than a native language?

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Java and C# can make optimisation based on how the application is actually run using the code as it is available at runtime. e.g. it can inline code in a shared library which can actually change while the program is running and still be correct. – Peter Lawrey May 16 at 19:57

22 Answers

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Generally, C# and Java can be just as fast or faster because the JIT compiler -- a compiler that compiles your IL the first time it's executed -- can make optimizations that a C++ compiled program cannot because it can query the machine. It can determine if the machine is Intel or AMD; Pentium 4, Core Solo, or Core Duo; or if supports SSE4, etc.

A C++ program has to be compiled beforehand usually with mixed optimizations so that it runs decently well on all machines, but is not optimized as much as it could be for a single configuration (i.e. processor, instruction set, other hardware).

Additionally certain language features allow the compiler in C# and Java to make assumptions about your code that allows it to optimize certain parts away that just aren't safe for the C/C++ compiler to do. When you have access to pointers there's a lot of optimizations that just aren't safe.

Also Java and C# can do heap allocations more efficiently and C# because the layer of abstraction between the garbage collector and your code allows it to do all of its heap compression at once (a fairly expensive operation).

Now I can't speak for Java on this next point, but I know that C# for example will actually remove methods and method calls when it knows the body of the method is empty. And it will use this kind of logic throughout your code.

So as you can see, there are lots of reasons why certain C# or Java implementations will be faster.

Now this all said, specific optimizations can be made in C++ that will blow away anything that you could do with C#, especially in the graphics realm and anytime you're close to the hardware. Pointers do wonders here.

So depending on what you're writing I would go with one or the other. But if you're writing something that isn't hardware dependent (driver, video game, etc), I wouldn't worry about the performance of C# (again can't speak about Java). It'll do just fine.

One the Java side, @Swati points out a good article:

http://www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/java/library/j-jtp09275.html?ca=dgr-jw22JavaUrbanLegends

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www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/java/… is a good article – Swati Sep 28 '08 at 3:23
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I wouldn't say faster because you are forced to do some things like creating mostly everything on the heap, and forced garbage collection. You also have an extra layer of abstraction that you have to go through. – Brian R. Bondy Sep 28 '08 at 3:53
Orion: Good answer! – Jay Bazuzi Sep 28 '08 at 4:03
Actually the heap allocations can be faster (reference @Swati's article) because th abstractions allow you to do things at the preferred time. Ultimately I believe that C# and Java will have better performance characteristics than C and C++ one day. – Orion Adrian Sep 28 '08 at 4:15
In that case MS better recode the VM to be coded in .Net (sarcasm) – Brian R. Bondy Sep 28 '08 at 4:19
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It would only happen if the Java interpreter is producing machine code that is actually better optimized than the machine code your compiler is generating for the C++ code you are writing, to the point where the C++ code is slower than the Java and the interpretation cost.

However, the odds of that actually happening are pretty low - unless perhaps Java has a very well-written library, and you have your own poorly written C++ library.

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I also believe that there is a certain language weight as well, when working at a lower level, with less abstraction, you will be developing a program that is faster. This is unrelated the points about the bytecode execution itself. – Brian R. Bondy Sep 28 '08 at 4:31
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The executable code produced from a Java or C# compiler is not interpretted -- it is compiled to native code "just in time" (JIT). So, the first time code in a Java/C# program is encountered during execution, there is some overhead as the "runtime compiler" (aka JIT compiler) turns the byte code (Java) or IL code (C#) into native machine instructions. However, the next time that code is encountered while the application is still running, the native code is executed immediately. This explains how some Java/C# programs appear to be slow initially, but then perform better the longer they run. A good example is an ASP.Net web site. The very first time the web site is accessed, it may be a bit slower as the C# code is compiled to native code by the JIT compiler. Subsequent accesses result in a much faster web site -- server and client side caching aside.

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On top of what some others have said, from my understanding .NET and Java are better at memory allocation. E.g. they can compact memory as it gets fragmented while C++ cannot (natively, but it can if you're using a clever garbage collector).

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Or if you're using a better C++ allocator and/or pool of objects. This is far from magic, from a C++ view point, and it can boils down to have "heap allocation" become as fast a stack allocation. – paercebal Sep 28 '08 at 8:43
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The virtual machine languages are unlikely to outperform compiled languages but they can get close enough that it doesn't matter, for (at least) the following reasons (I'm speaking for Java here since I've never done C#).

1/ The Java Runtime Environment is usually able to detect pieces of code that are run frequently and perform just-in-time (JIT) compilation of those sections so that, in future, they run at the full compiled speed.

2/ Vast portions of the Java libraries are compiled so that, when you call a library function, you're executing compiled code, not interpreted.

3/ Unless you're doing massive calculations, much of the time your program is running, it's waiting for input from a very slow (relatively speaking) human.

4/ At the worst case, performance-intensive code can be extracted to a compiled module and called from Java (see JNI) so that it runs at full speed.

To be honest, the Java bytecodes will never outperform native machine language, but there are ways to mitigate this. The big advantage of Java (as I see it) is the HUGE standard library and the ability for the code to run anywhere without recompiling.

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Re item 2, "2/ Vast portions of the Java libraries are compiled so that, when you call a library function, you're executing compiled code, not interpreted": Do you have a citation for that? If it were really as you describe, I'd expect to run into native code from my debugger a lot, but I don't. – cero Sep 28 '08 at 22:46
Re: cero Debuggers often utilize less efficient but more expressive paths, and are therefore not a good marker for anything performance related. – Guvante Oct 7 '08 at 18:35
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I'm not sure how often you'll find that Java code will run faster than C++, even with Hotspot, but I'll take a swing at explaining how it could happen.

Think of compiled Java code as interpreted machine language for the JVM. When the Hotspot processor notices that certain pieces of the compiled code are going to be used many times, it performs an optimization on the machine code. Since hand-tuning Assembly is almost always faster than C++ compiled code, it's ok to figure that programmatically-tuned machine code isn't going to be too bad.

So, for highly repetitious code, I could see where it'd be possible for Hotspot JVM to run the Java faster than C++... until garbage collection comes into play. :)

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JIT (Just In Time Compiling) can be incredibly fast because it optimizes for the target platform.

This means that it can take advantage of any compiler trick your CPU can support, regardless of what CPU the developer wrote the code on.

The basic concept of the .NET JIT works like this (heavily simplified):

Calling a method for the first time:

  • Your program code calls a method Foo()
  • The CLR looks at the type that implements Foo() and gets the metadata associated with it
  • From the metadata, the CLR knows what memory address the IL (Intermediate byte code) is stored in.
  • The CLR allocates a block of memory, and calls the JIT.
  • The JIT compiles the IL into native code, places it into the allocated memory, and then changes the function pointer in Foo()'s type metadata to point to this native code.
  • The native code is ran.

Calling a method for the second time:

  • Your program code calls a method Foo()
  • The CLR looks at the type that implements Foo() and finds the function pointer in the metadata.
  • The native code at this memory location is ran.

As you can see, the 2nd time around, its virtually the same process as C++, except with the advantage of real time optimizations.

That said, there are still other overhead issues that slow down a managed language, but the JIT helps a lot.

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By the way Jonathan, I think someone is still downvoting your things. When I voted you up you had a -1 on this post. – Brian R. Bondy Sep 28 '08 at 4:21
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In some cases, managed code can actually be faster than native code. For instance, "mark-and-sweep" garbage collection algorithms allow environments like the JRE or CLR to free large numbers of short-lived (usually) objects in a single pass, where most C/C++ heap objects are freed one-at-a-time.

From wikipedia:

For many practical purposes, allocation/deallocation-intensive algorithms implemented in garbage collected languages can actually be faster than their equivalents using manual heap allocation. A major reason for this is that the garbage collector allows the runtime system to amortize allocation and deallocation operations in a potentially advantageous fashion.

That said, I've written a lot of C# and a lot of C++, and I've run a lot of benchmarks. In my experience, C++ is a lot faster than C#, in two ways: (1) if you take some code that you've written in C#, port it to C++ the native code tends to be faster. How much faster? Well, it varies a whole lot, but it's not uncommon to see a 100% speed improvement. (2) In some cases, garbage collection can massively slow down a managed application. The .NET CLR does a terrible job with large heaps (say, > 2GB), and can end up spending a lot of time in GC--even in applications that have few--or even no--objects of intermediate life spans.

Of course, in most cases that I've encounted, managed languages are fast enough, by a long shot, and the maintenance and coding tradeoff for the extra performance of C++ is simply not a good one.

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The problem is that for long running processes, such as a web server, your memory over time will become so fragmented (in a C++ written program) that you will have to implement something that resembles garbage collection (or restart every so often, see IIS). – Tony BenBrahim Sep 28 '08 at 4:06
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Generally, your program's algorithm will be much more important to the speed of your application than the language. You can implement a poor algorithm in any language, including C++. With that in mind, you'll generally be able to write code the runs faster in a language that helps you implement a more efficient algorithm.

Higher-level languages do very well at this by providing easier access to many efficient pre-built data structures and encouraging practices that will help you avoid inefficient code. Of course, they can at times also make it easy to write a bunch of really slow code, too, so you still have to know your platform.

Also, C++ is catching up with "new" (note the quotes) features like the STL containers, auto pointers, etc -- see the boost library, for example. And you might occasionally find that the fastest way to accomplish some task requires a technique like pointer arithmetic that's forbidden in a higher-level language -- though they typcially allow you to call out to a library written in a language that can implement it as desired.

The main thing is to know the language you're using, it's associated API, what it can do, and what it's limitations are.

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Some good answers here about the specific question you asked. I'd like to step back and look at the bigger picture.

Keep in mind that your user's perception of the speed of the software you write is affected by many other factors than just how well the codegen optimizes. Here are some examples:

  • Manual memory management is hard to do correctly (no leaks), and even harder to do effeciently (free memory soon after you're done with it). Using a GC is, in general, more likely to produce a program that manages memory well. Are you willing to work very hard, and delay delivering your software, in an attempt to out-do the GC?

  • My C# is easier to read & understand than my C++. I also have more ways to convince myself that my C# code is working correctly. That means I can optimize my algorithms with less risk of introducing bugs (and users don't like software that crashes, even if it does it quickly!)

  • I can create my software faster in C# than in C++. That frees up time to work on performance, and still deliver my software on time.

  • It's easier to write good UI in C# than C++, so I'm more likely to be able to push work to the background while UI stays responsive, or to provide progress or hearbeat UI when the program has to block for a while. This doesn't make anything faster, but it makes users happier about waiting.

Everything I said about C# is probably true for Java, I just don't have the experience to say for sure.

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I like Orion Adrian's answer, but there is another aspect to it.

The same question was posed decades ago about assembly language vs. "human" languages like FORTRAN. And part of the answer is similar.

Yes, a C++ program is capable of being faster than C# on any given (non-trivial?) algorithm, but the program in C# will often be as fast or faster than a "naive" implementation in C++, and an optimized version in C++ will take longer to develop, and might still beat the C# version by a very small margin. So, is it really worth it?

You'll have to answer that question on a one-by-one basis.

That said, I'm a long time fan of C++, and I think it's an incredibly expressive and powerful language -- sometimes underappreciated. But in many "real life" problems (to me personally, that means "the kind I get paid to solve"), C# will get the job done sooner and safer.

The biggest penalty you pay? Many .NET and Java programs are memory hogs. I have seen .NET and Java apps take "hundreds" of megabytes of memory, when C++ programs of similar complexity barely scratch the "tens" of MBs.

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JIT vs. Static Compiler

As already said in the previous posts, JIT can compile IL/bytecode into native code at runtime. The cost of that was mentionned, but not to its conclusion:

JIT has one massive problem is that it can't compile everything: JIT compiling takes time, so the JIT will compile only some parts of the code, whereas a static compiler will produce a full native binary: For some kind of programs, the static compiler will simply easily outperform the JIT.

Of course, C# (or Java, or VB) is usually faster to produce viable and robust solution than is C++ (if only because C++ has complex semantics, and C++ standard library, while interesting and powerful, is quite poor when compared with the full scope of the standard library from .NET or Java), so usually, the difference between C++ and .NET or Java JIT won't be visible to most users, and for those binaries that are critical, well, you can still call C++ processing from C# or Java (even if this kind of native calls can be quite costly in themselves)...

C++ metaprograming

Note that usually, you are comparing C++ runtime code with its equivalent in C# or Java. But C++ has one feature that can outperform Java/C# out of the box, that is template metaprograming: The code processing will be done at compilation time (thus, increasing vastly compilation time), resulting into zero (or almost zero) runtime.

I have yet so see a real life effect on this (I played only with concepts, but by then, the difference was seconds of execution for JIT, and zero for C++), but this is worth mentioning, alongside the fact template metaprograming is not trivial...

Native C++ Memory Model

C++ has a memory model different from Java/C#, and thus, has different advantages/flaws. No matter the JIT optimization, nothing will go has fast as direct pointer access to memory (let's ignore for a moment processor caches, etc.). So, if you have contiguous data in memory, accessing it through C++ pointers (i.e. C pointers... Let's give Caesar its due) will goes times faster than in C#. And C++ has RAII, which makes a lot of processing a lot easier than in C# or even in Java. C++ does not need "using" to scope the existence of its objects. And C++ does not have a "finally" clause. This is not an error.

:-)

And despite C# primitive-like structs, C++ "on the stack" objects will cost nothing at allocation and destruction, and will need no GC to work in an independant thread to do the cleaning.

As for memory fragmentation, memory allocators in 2008 are not the old memory allocators from 1980 that are usually compared with a GC: C++ allocation can't be moved in memory, true, but then, like on a Linux filesystem: Who needs hard disk defragmenting when fragmentation does not happen? Using the right allocator for the right task should be part of the C++ developer toolkit. Now, writting allocators is not easy, and then, most of us have better things to do, and for the most of use, GC is more than good enough.

Now, the memory model is somewhat becoming more complicated with the rise of multicore and multithreading technology. In this field, I guess .NET has the advantage, and Java, I was told, held the upper ground. It's easy for some "on the bare metal" hacker to praise his "near the machine" code. But now, it is quite more difficult to produce better assembly by hand than letting the compiler to its job. For C++, the compiler became usually better than the hacker since a decade. For C# and Java, this is even easier.

Still, the new standard C++0x will impose a simple memory model to C++ compilers, which will simplify effective multiprocessing/parallel/threading code in C++, and make optimizations easier and safer for compilers. But then, we'll see in some couple of years if its promises are held true.

C++/CLI vs. C#/VB.NET

Note: In this section, I am talking about C++/CLI, that is, the C++ hosted by .NET, not the native C++.

Last week, I had a training on .NET optimization, and discovered that the static compiler is very important anyway. As important than JIT.

The very same code compiled in C++/CLI (a.k.a. Managed C++) could be times faster than the same code produced in C# (or VB.NET, whose compiler produces the same IL than C#).

Because the C++ static compiler was a lot better to produce already optimized code than C#'s.

For example, function inlining in .NET is limited to functions whose bytecode is less or equal than 32 bytes in length. So, some code in C# will produce a 40 bytes accessor, which won't be ever inlined by the JIT. The same code in C++ will produce a 20 bytes accessor, which will be inlined by the JIT.

Another example was temporary variables, that were simply compiled away by the C++ compiler while still being mentionned in the IL produced by the C# compiler. C++ thus authorizes a more aggressive GC.

The reason for this was speculated to be the fact C++ CLI compiler profited from the vast optimization techniques from C++ native compiler.

Conclusion

I love C++.

But as far as I see it, C# or Java are all in all a better bet. Not because they are faster than C++, but because when you add up their qualities, they end up being more productive, needing less training, and having more complete standard libraries than C++. And as for most of programs, their speed differences (in one way or another) will be negligible...

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Nice post. Thx for writing in the managed C++ stuff. I Found it to be quite interesting. – mattlant Sep 28 '08 at 9:49
I must say I was quite surprised by the results we saw in our training tests. Apparently MS is not interesting in making a better static compiiler for C# (the teacher told us there was no significant difference between VS.NET versions... And even between Debug/Release, if not the IL "nop"). – paercebal Sep 28 '08 at 10:14
One side note: MS produced NGEN to produce full natively compiled versions of IL binaries, and NGEN results are not really visible. This means that most C# programs would not benefit from a full native compilation anyway, I guess (this could not apply to C++/CLI because of its compiler's quality). – paercebal Sep 28 '08 at 10:16
Is that Jit disadvantage when compared to static compilers, an integral part of Jit's, or perhaps a better Jit in the future may overcome it? – Liran Orevi Apr 29 at 7:39
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If you're a Java/C# programmer learning C++, you'll be tempted to keep thinking in terms of Java/C# and translate verbatim to C++ syntax. In that case, you only get the earlier mentioned benefits of native code vs. interpreted/JIT. To get the biggest performance gain in C++ vs. Java/C#, you have to learn to think in C++ and design code specifically to exploit the strengths of C++.

To paraphrase Edsger Dijkstra: [your first language] mutilates the mind beyond recovery.
To paraphrase Jeff Atwood: you can write [your first language] in any new language.

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The compile for specific CPU optimizations are usually overrated. Just take a program in C++ and compile with optimization for pentium PRO and run on a pentium 4. Then recompile with optimize for pentium 4. I passed long afternoons doing it with several programs. General results?? Usually less than 2-3% performance increase. So the theoretical JIT advantages are almost none. Most differences of performance can only be observed when using scalar data processing features, something that will eventually need manual fine tunning to achieve maximum performance anyway. Optimizations of that sort are slow and costly to perform making them sometimes unsuitable for JIT anyway.

On real world and real application C++ is still usually faster than java, mainly because of lighter memory footprint that result in better cache performance.

But to use all of C++ capability you, the developer must work hard. You can achieve superior results, but you must use your brain for that. C++ is a language that decided to present you with more tools, charging the price that you must learn them to be able to use the language well.

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It's not so much that you are compiling for CPU optimization, but you are compiling for runtime path optimization. If you find that a method is very often called with a specific parameter, you could pre-compile that routine with that parameter as a constant which could (in the case of a boolean that controls flow) factor out gigantic chunks of work. C++ cannot come close to doing that kind of optimization. – Bill K Oct 9 at 17:42
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Here's an interesting benchmark http://zi.fi/shootout/

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Whenever I talk managed vs. unmanaged performance, I like to point to the series Rico (and Raymond) did comparing C++ and C# versions of a Chinese/English dictionary. This google search will let you read for yourself, but I like Rico's summary.

So am I ashamed by my crushing defeat? Hardly. The managed code got a very good result for hardly any effort. To defeat the managed Raymond had to:

  • Write his own file I/O stuff
  • Write his own string class
  • Write his own allocator
  • Write his own international mapping

Of course he used available lower level libraries to do this, but that's still a lot of work. Can you call what's left an STL program? I don't think so, I think he kept the std::vector class which ultimately was never a problem and he kept the find function. Pretty much everything else is gone.

So, yup, you can definately beat the CLR. Raymond can make his program go even faster I think.

Interestingly, the time to parse the file as reported by both programs internal timers is about the same -- 30ms for each. The difference is in the overhead.

For me the bottom line is that it took 6 revisions for the unmanaged version to beat the managed version that was a simple port of the original unmanaged code. If you need every last bit of performance (and have the time and expertise to get it), you'll have to go unmanaged, but for me, I'll take the order of magnitude advantage I have on the first versions over the 33% I gain if I try 6 times.

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Actually, C# does not really run in a virtual machine like Java does. IL is compiled into assembly language, which is entirely native code and runs at the same speed as native code. You can pre-JIT an .NET application which entirely removes the JIT cost and then you are running entirely native code.

The slowdown with .NET will come not because .NET code is slower, but because it does a lot more behind the scenes to do things like garbage collect, check references, store complete stack frames, etc. This can be quite powerful and helpful when building applications, but also comes at a cost. Note that you could do all these things in a C++ program as well (much of the core .NET functionality is actually .NET code which you can view in ROTOR). However, if you hand wrote the same functionality you would probably end up with a much slower program since the .NET runtime has been optimized and finely tuned.

That said, one of the strengths of managed code is that it can be fully verifiable, ie. you can verify that the code will never access another processes's memory or do unsage things before you execute it. Microsoft has a research prototype of a fully managed operating system that has suprisingly shown that a 100% managed environment can actually perform significantly faster than any modern operating system by taking advantage of this verification to turn off security features that are no longer needed by managed programs (we are talking like 10x in some cases). SE radio has a great episode talking about this project.

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I don't know either...my Java programs are always slow. :-) I've never really noticed C# programs being particularly slow, though.

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Actually Sun's HotSpot JVM uses "mixed-mode" execution. It interprets the method's bytecode until it determines (usually through a counter of some sort) that a particular block of code (method, loop, try-catch block, etc.) is going to be executed a lot, then it JIT compiles it. The time required to JIT compile a method often takes longer than if the method were to be interpreted if it is a seldom run method. Performance is usually higher for "mixed-mode" because the JVM does not waste time JITing code that is rarely, if ever, run. C# and .NET do not do this. .NET JITs everything which, often times, wastes time.

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One of the most significant JIT optimizations is method inlining. Java can even inline virtual methods if it can guarantee runtime correctness. This kind of optimization usually cannot be performed by standard static compilers because it needs whole-program analysis, which is hard because of separate compilation (in contrast, JIT has all the program available to it). Method inlining improves other optimizations, giving larger code blocks to optimize.

Standard memory allocation in Java/C# is also faster, and deallocation (GC) is not much slower, but only less deterministic.

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Here is another intersting benchmark, which you can try yourself on your own computer.

It compares ASM, VC++, C#, Silverlight, Java applet, Javascript, Flash (AS3)

Roozz plugin speed demo

Please note that the speed of javascript varries a lot depending on what browser is executing it. The same is true for Flash and Silverlight because these plugins run in the same process as the hosting browser. But the Roozz plugin run standard .exe files, which run in their own process, thus the speed is not influenced by the hosting browser.

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Here is answer from Cliff Click: http://blogs.azulsystems.com/cliff/2009/09/java-vs-c-performance-again.html

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