Lyra: A Benchmark for Turducken-Style Code Generation

1Citations
Citations of this article
9Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Recently, neural techniques have been used to generate source code automatically. While promising for declarative languages, these approaches achieve much poorer performance on datasets for imperative languages. Since a declarative language is typically embedded in an imperative language (i.e., the turducken-style programming) in real-world software development, the promising results on declarative languages can hardly lead to significant reduction of manual software development efforts. In this paper, we define a new code generation task: given a natural language comment, this task aims to generate a program in a base imperative language with an embedded declarative language. To our knowledge, this is the first turducken-style code generation task. For this task, we present Lyra: a dataset in Python with embedded SQL. This dataset contains 2,000 carefully annotated database manipulation programs from real-world projects. Each program is paired with both a Chinese comment and an English comment. In our experiment, we adopted Transformer, BERT-style, and GPT-style models as baselines. In the best setting, the generation performance of GPT-style models is better than others, where the AST exact matching accuracy is 24% and 25.5% when using Chinese and English comments, respectively. Therefore, we believe that Lyra provides a new challenge for code generation. Yet, overcoming this challenge may significantly boost the applicability of code generation techniques for real-world software development.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Liang, Q., Sun, Z., Zhu, Q., Zhang, W., Yu, L., Xiong, Y., & Zhang, L. (2022). Lyra: A Benchmark for Turducken-Style Code Generation. In IJCAI International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (pp. 4238–4244). International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence. https://doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2022/588

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free