Investigating factors that affect the human perception on god class detection: an analysis based on a family of four controlled experiments
Keywords:
Controlled experiment, Code smell, God classAbstract
ContextEvaluation of design problems in object oriented systems, which we call code smells, is mostly a human-based task. Several studies have investigated the impact of code smells in practice. Studies focusing on human identification of code smells have shown low agreement among developers. Unfortunately, those studies do not attempt to investigate the reasons behind this phenomenon.;
ObjectiveThis paper aims to investigate factors affecting human perception of code smells. Specifically, it focuses on factors affecting god class detection, one of the most known code smells.;
MethodThe investigation encompassed a family of four controlled experiments, covering potential factors affecting human detection of code smells. The method is incremental. In other words, each experiment produces insights to the next one. This allows the investigators to control specific factors affecting the agreement on god class detection. The factors addressed in this study are: i) developer experience, ii) developer knowledge, iii) developer training, iv) tool support for design comprehension, and v) software size.;
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Copyright (c) 2021 José Amancio M. Santos, João B. Rocha-Junior, Manoel Gomes de Mendonça
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.