English

Investigating and Recommending Co-Changed Entities for JavaScript Programs

Software Engineering 2021-02-18 v2 Programming Languages

Abstract

JavaScript (JS) is one of the most popular programming languages due to its flexibility and versatility, but maintaining JS code is tedious and error-prone. In our research, we conducted an empirical study to characterize the relationship between co-changed software entities (e.g., functions and variables), and built a machine learning (ML)-based approach to recommend additional entity to edit given developers' code changes. Specifically, we first crawled 14,747 commits in 10 open-source projects; for each commit, we created one or more change dependency graphs (CDGs) to model the referencer-referencee relationship between co-changed entities. Next, we extracted the common subgraphs between CDGs to locate recurring co-change patterns between entities. Finally, based on those patterns, we extracted code features from co-changed entities and trained an ML model that recommends entities-to-change given a program commit. According to our empirical investigation, (1) three recurring patterns commonly exist in all projects; (2) 80%--90% of co-changed function pairs either invoke the same function(s), access the same variable(s), or contain similar statement(s); (3) our ML-based approach CoRec recommended entity changes with high accuracy (73%--78%). CoRec complements prior work because it suggests changes based on program syntax, textual similarity, as well as software history; it achieved higher accuracy than two existing tools in our evaluation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2102.07877,
  title  = {Investigating and Recommending Co-Changed Entities for JavaScript Programs},
  author = {Zijian Jiang and Hao Zhong and Na Meng},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2102.07877},
  year   = {2021}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-23T23:11:34.695Z