• DocumentCode
    841092
  • Title

    An Exploratory Study of How Developers Seek, Relate, and Collect Relevant Information during Software Maintenance Tasks

  • Author

    Ko, Andrew J. ; Myers, Brad A. ; Coblenz, Michael J. ; Aung, Htet Htet

  • Author_Institution
    Human-Comput. Interaction Inst., Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA
  • Volume
    32
  • Issue
    12
  • fYear
    2006
  • Firstpage
    971
  • Lastpage
    987
  • Abstract
    Much of software developers´ time is spent understanding unfamiliar code. To better understand how developers gain this understanding and how software development environments might be involved, a study was performed in which developers were given an unfamiliar program and asked to work on two debugging tasks and three enhancement tasks for 70 minutes. The study found that developers interleaved three activities. They began by searching for relevant code both manually and using search tools; however, they based their searches on limited and misrepresentative cues in the code, environment, and executing program, often leading to failed searches. When developers found relevant code, they followed its incoming and outgoing dependencies, often returning to it and navigating its other dependencies; while doing so, however, Eclipse´s navigational tools caused significant overhead. Developers collected code and other information that they believed would be necessary to edit, duplicate, or otherwise refer to later by encoding it in the interactive state of Eclipse´s package explorer, file tabs, and scroll bars. However, developers lost track of relevant code as these interfaces were used for other tasks, and developers were forced to find it again. These issues caused developers to spend, on average, 35 percent of their time performing the mechanics of navigation within and between source files. These observations suggest a new model of program understanding grounded in theories of information foraging and suggest ideas for tools that help developers seek, relate, and collect information in a more effective and explicit manner
  • Keywords
    program debugging; software maintenance; Eclipse package explorer; debugging task; file tabs; information foraging; program understanding; scroll bars; search tool; software development environment; software maintenance tasks; source files; Bars; Debugging; Encoding; Navigation; Packaging; Performance gain; Programming; Software engineering; Software maintenance; Software tools; Program investigation; empirical software engineering; information foraging; information scent.; program comprehension; program understanding;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Software Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0098-5589
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TSE.2006.116
  • Filename
    4016573