yeah whoever said that didn't know what he was talking about, who told you that?
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love, Daco"
drop dead
love, Daco"
drop dead
Dolphin vs DolphinIL
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12-03-2009, 08:45 AM
yeah whoever said that didn't know what he was talking about, who told you that?
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love, Daco" drop dead 12-03-2009, 08:47 AM
I don't remember , and I think that was the noob explanation so I could understand ( lol , I was a noob xD )
MB : MSI Z68A-GD80
CPU : Intel Core i7 2600k @ 3.4 GHz (stock clock) Gfx : ATI Raedon HD 6850 Ram : 4 GB DDR3-1333 OS : Windows XP x86 I speak Spanish ( And a little English ) 12-03-2009, 09:38 AM
I too wanna know the difference... I always assumed the dolphinIL was the 64bit executable
My Specs: AMD Phenom II x4 940 3.0ghz - w7/Ubuntu 11.04
well , the only thing I know that IL is another version of the traditional core . JIT means Just-In-Time ( and I think JIT dynarec means Just-In-Time dynamic recompiler ) , the only thing that I don't know is what means IL.
And is better no talk about this anymore because this thread will be closed ( yeah , this question is asked a lot ) [color=#DCDCDC]*nosound comes and close this thread xD*[/color]
MB : MSI Z68A-GD80
CPU : Intel Core i7 2600k @ 3.4 GHz (stock clock) Gfx : ATI Raedon HD 6850 Ram : 4 GB DDR3-1333 OS : Windows XP x86 I speak Spanish ( And a little English ) 12-03-2009, 10:51 AM
IL does not skip anything.
JIT recompiles PPC instructions straight to x86 or x86-64 instructions in blocks. JITIL recompiles PPC instructions to an IL (intermediate language) instructions in blocks. A second pass then recompiles the IL to x86 or x86-64 code. The second pass in JITIL can make the emulator faster because inefficient code found in the first pass is easier to identify and fix. 12-03-2009, 11:06 AM
Just In Time Intermediate language is what JITIL stands for
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