Computer Science and Information Systems
The international journal published by ComSIS Consortium 

Metrics for Evaluation of Metaprogram Complexity

 


 

Robertas Damaševičius and Vytautas Štuikys

 

1 Kaunas University of Technology, Software Engineering Department,
Studentu 50, LT-51368, Kaunas, Lithuania
{robertas.damasevicius, vytautas.stuikys}@ktu.lt  

 

 

 

Abstract. The concept of complexity is used in many areas of computer science and software engineering. Software complexity metrics can be used to evaluate and compare quality of software development and maintenance processes and their products. Complexity management and measurement is especially important in novel programming technologies and paradigms, such as aspect-oriented programming, generative programming, and metaprogramming, where complex multi-language and multi-aspect program specifications are developed and used. This paper analyzes complexity management and measurement techniques, and proposes five complexity metrics (Relative Kolmogorov Complexity, Metalanguage Richness, Cyclomatic Complexity, Normalized Difficulty, Cognitive Difficulty) for measuring complexity of metaprograms at information, metalanguage, graph, algorithm, and cognitive dimensions.

 
 
 
 
Home 
ComSIS Consortium
Aims and Scope 
Editorial Board
Editorial Council
Managing Board
Information for Contributors
Copyright Transfer Form
Current Issue
Archive
Forthcoming Articles
Subscription
Contact Info