Publication | Closed Access
Latent Patterns in Activities: A Field Study of How Developers Manage Context
18
Citations
33
References
2019
Year
Unknown Venue
Software MaintenanceSoftware Development PracticeEngineeringProject ManagementTask AnalysisSoftware EngineeringContext AwarenessCommunicationContext AnalysisSoftware AnalysisContext ManagementSmaller UnitsManagementSoftware PracticeUser ContextSoftware Development ProcessBetter UnderstandingField StudyDesignLatent PatternsUser ExperienceInformation ManagementSoftware DesignProgramming TaskProgram ComprehensionBusinessDesign ThinkingContext ModelHuman-computer InteractionKnowledge Management
In order to build efficient tools that support complex programming tasks, it is imperative that we understand how developers program. We know that developers create a context around their programming task by gathering relevant information. We also know that developers decompose their tasks recursively into smaller units. However, important gaps exist in our knowledge about: (1) the role that context plays in supporting smaller units of tasks, (2) the relationship that exists among these smaller units, and (3) how context flows across them. The goal of this research is to gain a better understanding of how developers structure their tasks and manage context through a field study of ten professional developers in an industrial setting. Our analysis reveals that developers decompose their tasks into smaller units with distinct goals, that specific patterns exist in how they sequence these smaller units, and that developers may maintain context between those smaller units with related goals.
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