Compile time

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Compile time refers to the compilation phase of the program life cycle. The actions undertaken at this stage are referred as compile-time, static, and sometimes as early. The term static is used in order to stress that the properties provable at compile-time stay valid for the program as a whole, and thus do not depend on the program's dynamic execution state. The term early is used as an opposite to late.

In particular statically typed languages are often backed with the argument that errors has to be detected as early as possible. Some languages were especially designed in a way to support an extensive static analysis of the program semantics.

The phases following to compile time are link time and run time.

The compile-time actions are undertaken by the compiler/interpreter. These include lexical, syntax, and semantic analysis followed by code generation and maintenance of the language development environment, and error diagnostic. For the compiler the generated code is usually intermediate. For an interpreter the code is targeted for the corresponding virtual machine and is immediately executed on it.

Examples of use: compile-time error detection, compile-time object, compile-time constant, static analysis, static typing, static expression, early binding.