DocumentCode :
2872744
Title :
Syntactic Identifier Conciseness and Consistency
Author :
Lawrie, Dawn ; Feild, Henry ; Binkley, David
Author_Institution :
Loyola College, USA
fYear :
2006
fDate :
Sept. 2006
Firstpage :
139
Lastpage :
148
Abstract :
Readers of programs have two main sources of domain information: identifier names and comments. It is therefore important for the identifier names (as well as comments) to communicate clearly the concepts that they are meant to represent. Dei¿enb¿ock and Pizka recently introduced rules for concise and consistent variable naming. One requirement of their approach is an expert provided mapping from identifiers to concepts. An approach for the concise and consistent naming of variables that does not require any additional information (e.g., a mapping) is presented. Using a pool of 48 million lines of code, experiments with the resulting syntactic rules for concise and consistent naming illustrate that violations of the syntactic pattern exist. Two case studies show that three quarters of the violations uncovered are "real". That is they would be identified using a concept mapping. Techniques for reducing the number of false positives are also presented. Finally, two related studies show that evolution does not introduce rule violations and that programmers tend to use a rather limited vocabulary.
Keywords :
Costs; Educational institutions; Information resources; Natural languages; Pediatrics; Programming profession; Vocabulary; Identifier Quality; Part-of-speech;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Source Code Analysis and Manipulation, 2006. SCAM '06. Sixth IEEE International Workshop on
Conference_Location :
Philadelphia, PA, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2353-6
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/SCAM.2006.31
Filename :
4026863
Link To Document :
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