DocumentCode :
1279353
Title :
Effects of structure on the comprehensibility of formal specifications
Author :
Finney, K. ; Fenton, N. ; Fedorec, A.
Author_Institution :
Greenwich Univ., London, UK
Volume :
146
Issue :
4
fYear :
1999
fDate :
8/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
193
Lastpage :
202
Abstract :
Use of structuring mechanisms (such as modularisation) is widely believed to be one of the key ways to improve software quality. Structuring is considered to be at least as important for specification documents as for source code, since it is assumed to improve comprehensibility. Yet, as with most widely held assumptions in software engineering, there is little empirical evidence to support this hypothesis. Also, even if structuring can be shown to be a good thing, we do not know how much structuring is somehow optimal. One of the more popular formal specification languages, Z, encourages structuring through its schema calculus. A controlled experiment is described in which two hypotheses about the effects of structure on the comprehensibility of Z specifications are tested. Evidence was found that structuring a specification into schemas of about 20 lines long significantly improved comprehensibility over a monolithic specification. However, there seems to be no perceived advantage in breaking down the schemas into much smaller components. The experiment can be fully replicated
Keywords :
formal specification; software quality; specification languages; Z language; experiment; formal specification; schema calculus; software engineering; software quality; source code; specification languages; structuring mechanisms;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Software, IEE Proceedings -
Publisher :
iet
ISSN :
1462-5970
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1049/ip-sen:19990600
Filename :
809350
Link To Document :
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