Delphi is compiled to native code, whereas C# is compiled to CLR code which is then translated at runtime. That said C# does use JIT compilation, so you might expect the timing to be more similar, but it is not a given.
It would be useful if you could describe the hardware you ran this on (CPU, clock rate).
I do not have access to Delphi to repeat your experiment, but using native C++ vs C# and the following code:
VC++ 2008
#include <iostream>
#include <windows.h>
int main(void)
{
int tick = GetTickCount() ;
for (int i = 0; i < 1000000000; ++i)
{
}
tick = GetTickCount() - tick;
std::cout << tick << " ms" << std::endl ;
}
C#
using System;
namespace ConsoleApplication1
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
int tick = System.Environment.TickCount;
for (int i = 0; i < 1000000000; ++i)
{
}
tick = System.Environment.TickCount - tick;
Console.Write( tick.ToString() + " ms" ) ;
}
}
}
I initially got:
C++ 2792ms
C# 2980ms
However I then performed a Rebuild on the C# version and ran the executable in <project>\bin\release and <project>\bin\debug respectively directly from the command line. This yielded:
C# (release): 720ms
C# (debug): 3105ms
So I reckon that is where the difference truly lies, you were running the debug version of the C# code from the IDE.
In case you are thinking that C++ is then particularly slow, I ran that as an optimised release build and got:
C++ (Optimised): 0ms
This is not surprising because the loop is empty, and the control variable is not used outside the loop so the optimiser removes it altogether. To avoid that I declared i as a volatile with the following result:
C++ (volatile i): 2932ms
My guess is that the C# implementation also removed the loop and that the 720ms is from something else; this may explain most of the difference between the timings in the first test.
What Delphi is doing I cannot tell, you might look at the generated assembly code to see.
All the above tests on AMD Athlon Dual Core 5000B 2.60GHz, on Windows 7 32bit.