דלג לתוכן (מקש קיצור 's')
אירועים

אירועים והרצאות בפקולטה למדעי המחשב ע"ש הנרי ומרילין טאוב

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אלי סנש (הרצאה סמינריונית למגיסטר)
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יום ראשון, 25.01.2015, 16:30
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Taub 601
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מנחה: Prof. Yossi Gil
With the advent of easier to parse languages such as Java, and the availability on the Internet of open-source software repositories, complete with versioning histories, empirical studies at scale of software engineering metrics and measurements have become possible and feasible. We take up the questions of if and how "structured GOTO" statements impact defect proneness, and of which what concept of size yields a superior metric for defect prediction. We view the topic through the lens of evidence-based language design, following the drive ignited by Markstrum and others. Both the \Goto keyword and large methods are traditionally "considered harmful", so much so that programmers are advised to avoid them in all cases. Despite this traditional view, modern languages still contain constructs for branching to nonadjacent syntax-tree nodes, which we term unstructured jumps. We count these \Goto-like unstructured jumps, alongside method size and compressed method size, as software engineering metrics, and examine the evolution of 26 open-source code corpora in relation to those metrics. We employ five different measures of defectiveness and development effort. We measure the statistical quality of our metrics as predictors of our defect measurements. We show that the number of unstructured jumps is a predictor of defects, routine maintenance and two other metrics of software development effort. The correlation between unstructured jumps and development effort is positive, and it remains so even after accounting for the effect of code size. We also show that between uncompressed and compressed code size, compressed size is the superior predictor of defect proneness, maintenance, version increase, and code churn, while uncompressed size only predicts better when measuring accumulated defects. The number of unstructured jumps is superior to code size, both compressed and uncompressed, in its predictive power of accumulated defects. Compressed size, however, provides the best predictor for churn and routine maintenance. Uncompressed size provides the best predictor for the density of defects throughout methods of fixed size. We also find that size metrics do not predict defects as a linear function of method size. Defect density, the quantity of defects per unit of method size, is nonuniform across method lengths, and displays a statistically significant negative correlation with method length overall. When relative method size is considered instead of absolute method size, we find that defects cluster densely in the smallest and largest methods, with very low defect densities in between. Attempts to propose a transformation on a size metric which would yield a new, metric with constant defect density, contrary to expectations, yielded strictly worse predictors than the original size metrics.