Publication | Closed Access
SNIAFL: towards a static non-interactive approach to feature location
31
Citations
23
References
2004
Year
Software MaintenanceEngineeringSoftware EngineeringSource Code AnalysisFeature LocationSoftware AnalysisLocalizationAutomated Software EngineeringInformation RetrievalData ScienceData MiningSoftware MiningSource CodeFeature EngineeringKnowledge DiscoveryFeature ModelingComputer ScienceSoftware DesignSoftware EvolutionStatic Non-interactive ApproachSpatial ComputingProgram AnalysisSoftware TestingSystem Software
To facilitate software maintenance and evolution, a helpful step is to locate features concerned in a particular maintenance task. In the literature, both dynamic and interactive approaches have been proposed for feature location. In this paper, we present a static and non-interactive method for achieving this objective. The main idea of our approach is to use the information retrieval (IR) technology to reveal the basic connections between features and computational units in source code. Due to the characteristics of the retrieved connections, we use a static representation of the source code named BRCG to further recover both the relevant and the specific computational units for each feature. Furthermore, we recover the relationships among the relevant units for each feature. A premise of our approach is that programmers should use meaningful names as identifiers. We perform an experimental study based on a GNU system to evaluate our approach. In the experimental study, we present the detailed quantitative experimental data and give the qualitative analytical results.
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