On the diffuseness and the impact on maintainability of code smells

A large scale empirical investigation

Journal Article (2017)
Author(s)

F. Palomba (TU Delft - Software Engineering)

Gabriele Bavota (Università della Svizzera Italiana)

Massimiliano Di Penta (University of Sannio)

Fausto Fasano (University of Molise)

Rocco Oliveto (University of Molise)

Andrea De Lucia (University of Salerno)

Research Group
Software Engineering
Copyright
© 2017 F. Palomba, Gabriele Bavota, Massimiliano Di Penta, Fausto Fasano, Rocco Oliveto, Andrea De Lucia
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10664-017-9535-z
More Info
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Publication Year
2017
Language
English
Copyright
© 2017 F. Palomba, Gabriele Bavota, Massimiliano Di Penta, Fausto Fasano, Rocco Oliveto, Andrea De Lucia
Research Group
Software Engineering
Pages (from-to)
1-34

Abstract

Code smells are symptoms of poor design and implementation choices that may hinder code comprehensibility and maintainability. Despite the effort devoted by the research community in studying code smells, the extent to which code smells in software systems affect software maintainability remains still unclear. In this paper we present a large scale empirical investigation on the diffuseness of code smells and their impact on code change- and fault-proneness. The study was conducted across a total of 395 releases of 30 open source projects and considering 17,350 manually validated instances of 13 different code smell kinds. The results show that smells characterized by long and/or complex code (e.g., Complex Class) are highly diffused, and that smelly classes have a higher change- and fault-proneness than smell-free classes.

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