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Sixth International Software Metrics Symposium (METRICS'99)
An Empirical Study on Object-Oriented Metrics
Boca Raton, Florida
November 04-November 06
ISBN: 0-7695-0403-5
Mei-Huei Tang, State University of New York at Albany
Ming-Hung Kao, State University of New York at Albany
Mei-Hwa Chen, State University of New York at Albany
The objective of this study is the investigation of the correlation between object-oriented design metrics and the likelihood of the occurrence of object-oriented faults. Such a relationship, if identified, can be utilized to select effective testing techniques that take the characteristics of the program under test into account.Our empirical study was conducted on three industrial real-time systems that contain a number of natural faults reported for the past three years. The faults found in these three systems are classified into three types: object-oriented faults, object management faults and traditional faults. The object-oriented design metrics suite proposed by Chidamber and Kemerer is validated using these faults. Moreover, we propose a set of new metrics that can serve as an indicator of how strongly object-oriented a program is, so that the decision to adopt object-oriented testing techniques can be made, to achieve more reliable testing and yet minimize redundant testing efforts.
Index Terms:
object-oriented metrics, CK metrics, object-oriented fault analysis
Citation:
Mei-Huei Tang, Ming-Hung Kao, Mei-Hwa Chen, "An Empirical Study on Object-Oriented Metrics," metrics, pp.242, Sixth International Software Metrics Symposium (METRICS'99), 1999
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