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TSE
2008

Do Crosscutting Concerns Cause Defects?

13 years 11 months ago
Do Crosscutting Concerns Cause Defects?
There is a growing consensus that crosscutting concerns harm code quality. An example of a crosscutting concern is a functional requirement whose implementation is distributed across multiple software modules. We asked the question, "How much does the amount that a concern is crosscutting affect the number of defects in a program?" We conducted three extensive case studies to help answer this question. All three studies revealed a moderate to strong statistically significant correlation between the degree of scattering and the number of defects. This paper describes the experimental framework we developed to conduct the studies, the metrics we adopted and developed to measure the degree of scattering, the studies we performed, the efforts we undertook to remove experimental and other biases, and the results we obtained. In the process, we have formulated a theory that explains why increased scattering might lead to increased defects.
Marc Eaddy, Thomas Zimmermann, Kaitin D. Sherwood,
Added 15 Dec 2010
Updated 15 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2008
Where TSE
Authors Marc Eaddy, Thomas Zimmermann, Kaitin D. Sherwood, Vibhav Garg, Gail C. Murphy, Nachiappan Nagappan, Alfred V. Aho
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