An Exploratory Study on Refactoring Documentation in Issues Handling

3Citations
Citations of this article
21Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Understanding the practice of refactoring documentation is of para-mount importance in academia and industry. Issue tracking systems are used by most software projects enabling developers, quality assurance, managers, and users to submit feature requests and other tasks such as bug fixing and code review. Although recent studies explored how to document refactoring in commit messages, little is known about how developers describe their refactoring needs in issues. In this study, we aim at exploring developer-reported refactoring changes in issues to better understand what developers consider to be problematic in their code and how they handle it. Our approach relies on text mining 45,477 refactoring-related issues and identifying refactoring patterns from a diverse corpus of 77 Java projects by investigating issues associated with 15,833 refactoring operations and developers' explicit refactoring intention. Our results show that (1) developers mostly use move refactoring related terms/phrases to target refactoring-related issues; and (2) developers tend to explicitly mention the improvement of specific quality attributes and focus on duplicate code removal. We envision our findings enabling tool builders to support developers with automated documentation of refactoring changes in issues.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Alomar, E. A., Peruma, A., Mkaouer, M. W., Newman, C. D., & Ouni, A. (2022). An Exploratory Study on Refactoring Documentation in Issues Handling. In Proceedings - 2022 Mining Software Repositories Conference, MSR 2022 (pp. 107–111). Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc. https://doi.org/10.1145/3524842.3528525

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