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Content Provider | ACM Digital Library |
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Author | Muşlu, Kıvanç Notkin, David Holmes, Reid Ernst, Michael D. Brun, Yuriy |
Abstract | Modern integrated development environments make recommendations and automate common tasks, such as refactorings, auto-completions, and error corrections. However, these tools present little or no information about the consequences of the recommended changes. For example, a rename refactoring may: modify the source code without changing program semantics; modify the source code and (incorrectly) change program semantics; modify the source code and (incorrectly) create compilation errors; show a name collision warning and require developer input; or show an error and not change the source code. Having to compute the consequences of a recommendation -- either mentally or by making source code changes -- puts an extra burden on the developers. This paper aims to reduce this burden with a technique that informs developers of the consequences of code transformations. Using Eclipse Quick Fix as a domain, we describe a plug-in, Quick Fix Scout, that computes the consequences of Quick Fix recommendations. In our experiments, developers completed compilation-error removal tasks 10% faster when using Quick Fix Scout than Quick Fix, although the sample size was not large enough to show statistical significance. |
Starting Page | 669 |
Ending Page | 682 |
Page Count | 14 |
File Format | |
ISSN | 03621340 15581160 |
DOI | 10.1145/2398857.2384665 |
Journal | ACM SIGPLAN Notices (SIGP) |
Volume Number | 47 |
Issue Number | 10 |
Language | English |
Publisher | Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) |
Publisher Date | 1983-05-01 |
Publisher Place | New York |
Access Restriction | One Nation One Subscription (ONOS) |
Subject Keyword | Quick fix Recommendations Eclipse Quick fix scout Ide Quick fix dialog Speculative analysis |
Content Type | Text |
Resource Type | Article |
Subject | Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design Software |
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