Author :
Kumar, Avadhesh ; Kumar, Rajesh ; Grover, P.S.
Abstract :
Notice of Violation of IEEE Publication Principles
"Towards a Unified Framework for Cohesion Measurement in Aspect-Oriented Systems,"
by A. Kumar, R. Kumar, P.S. Grover
in the Proceedings of the 19th Australian Conference on Software Engineering. ASWEC 2008. pp.57-65, March 2008
After careful and considered review of the content and authorship of this paper by a duly constituted expert committee, this paper has been found to be in violation of IEEE\´s Publication Principles.
This paper contains significant portions of original text from the paper cited below. The original text was copied without attribution (including appropriate references to the original author(s) and/or paper title) and without permission.
Due to the nature of this violation, reasonable effort should be made to remove all past references to this paper, and future references should be made to the following article:
"Towards a Unified Coupling Framework for Measuring Aspect-oriented Programs"
by T.T. Bartolomei, A. Garcia, C. Sant\´Anna, C., E. Figueiredo
in the Proceedings of the 3rd International Workshop on Software Quality Assurance (Portland, Oregon, November 06 - 06, 2006). SOQUA \´06. ACM
Aspect-oriented programming (AOP) is an emerging technique that provides a means to cleanly encapsulate and implement aspects that crosscut other modules. However, despite an interesting body of work for measuring cohesion in aspect-oriented (AO) systems, there is poor understanding of cohesion in the context of AOP. Most of the proposed cohesion assessment framework and metrics for AOP are for AspectJ programming language. In this paper we have defined a generic cohesion framework that takes into account two, the most well known families of available AOP languages, AspectJ and CaesarJ. This unified framework contributes in better understanding of cohesion in AOP, witch can contribute in (i) comparing measures and their potential use, (ii) integratin- g different existing measures which examine the same concept in different ways, and (iii) defining new cohesion metrics, which in turn permits the analysis and comparison of Java, AspectJ and CaesarJ implementations.